Cost-effectiveness of a structured medication review approach for multimorbid older adults: Within-trial analysis of the OPERAM study

Author:

Salari PaolaORCID,O’Mahony CianORCID,Henrard Séverine,Welsing Paco,Bhadhuri Arjun,Schur Nadine,Roumet MarieORCID,Beglinger ShanthiORCID,Beck Thomas,Jungo Katharina Tabea,Byrne Stephen,Hossmann Stefanie,Knol Wilma,O’Mahony Denis,Spinewine Anne,Rodondi Nicolas,Schwenkglenks Matthias

Abstract

BackgroundInappropriate polypharmacy has been linked with adverse outcomes in older, multimorbid adults. OPERAM is a European cluster-randomized trial aimed at testing the effect of a structured pharmacotherapy optimization intervention on preventable drug-related hospital admissions in multimorbid adults with polypharmacy aged 70 years or older. Clinical results of the trial showed a pattern of reduced drug-related hospital admissions, but without statistical significance. In this study we assessed the cost-effectiveness of the pharmacotherapy optimisation intervention.MethodsWe performed a pre-planned within-trial cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) of the OPERAM intervention, from a healthcare system perspective. All data were collected within the trial apart from unit costs. QALYs were computed by applying the crosswalk German valuation algorithm to EQ-5D-5L-based quality of life data. Considering the clustered structure of the data and between-country heterogeneity, we applied Generalized Structural Equation Models (GSEMs) on a multiple imputed sample to estimate costs and QALYs. We also performed analyses by country and subgroup analyses by patient and morbidity characteristics.ResultsTrial-wide, the intervention was numerically dominant, with a potential cost-saving of CHF 3’588 (95% confidence interval (CI): -7’716; 540) and gain of 0.025 QALYs (CI: -0.002; 0.052) per patient. Robustness analyses confirmed the validity of the GSEM model. Subgroup analyses suggested stronger effects in people at higher risk.ConclusionWe observed a pattern towards dominance, potentially resulting from an accumulation of multiple small positive intervention effects. Our methodological approaches may inform other CEAs of multi-country, cluster-randomized trials facing presence of missing values and heterogeneity between centres/countries.

Funder

Horizon 2020 Framework Programme

Staatssekretariat für Bildung, Forschung und Innovation

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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