Olanzapine cost-effectiveness in vomiting and nausea from highly emetogenic chemotherapy in children and adolescents

Sra, Manraj Singh ; Ganguly, Shuvadeep ; Naik, Ramavath Devendra ; Sasi, Archana ; Sharma, Priya ; Giri, Rupak Kumar ; Abdul Rasheed, Azgar ; Bakhshi, Sameer (2023) Olanzapine cost-effectiveness in vomiting and nausea from highly emetogenic chemotherapy in children and adolescents BMJ Supportive & Palliative Care, 13 (e3). e1272-e1279. ISSN 2045-435X

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1136/spcare-2022-004069

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/spcare-2022-004069

Abstract

Objectives To assess the cost-effectiveness of addition of olanzapine to a prophylactic antiemetic regimen containing aprepitant, dexamethasone and ondansetron among children receiving highly emetogenic chemotherapy (HEC) in India, Bangladesh, Indonesia, the UK and the USA. Methods Health states were estimated using individual patient-level outcome data from a randomised trial. The incremental cost–utility ratio (ICUR), incremental cost-effectiveness ratio and net monetary benefit (NMB) were calculated from the patient perspective for India, Bangladesh, Indonesia, the UK and the USA. One-way sensitivity analysis was done by varying the cost of olanzapine, cost of hospitalisation and utility values by ±25%. Results The olanzapine arm had an increment of 0.0018 quality-adjusted life-years (QALY) over the control arm. The mean total expenditure in the olanzapine arm was greater by US$0.51, US$0.43, US$6.73, US$11.05 and US$12.35 in India, Bangladesh, Indonesia, the UK and the USA, respectively. The ICUR($/QALY) was US$282.60 in India, US$241.42 in Bangladesh, US$3755.93 in Indonesia, US$6161.83 in the UK and US$6887.41 in the USA. The NMB was US$9.86, US$10.12, US$14.08, US$44.74 and US$98.79 for India, Bangladesh, Indonesia, the UK and the USA, respectively. The ICUR estimates of the base case and sensitivity analysis were below the willingness-to-pay threshold in all scenarios. Conclusion The addition of olanzapine as a fourth agent for antiemetic prophylaxis is cost-effective despite an increase in overall expenditure. Olanzapine should be uniformly considered for children receiving HEC.

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