Cost‐effectiveness of testosterone treatment utilising individual patient data from randomised controlled trials in men with low testosterone levels

Author:

Hernández Rodolfo1,de Silva Nipun Lakshitha23,Hudson Jemma4,Cruickshank Moira4,Quinton Richard356,Manson Paul4,Dhillo Waljit S.3,Bhattacharya Siladitya7,Brazzelli Miriam4,Jayasena Channa N.3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Health Economics Research Unit University of Aberdeen Foresterhill Aberdeen UK

2. Faculty of Medicine General Sir John Kotelawala Defence University Colombo Sri Lanka

3. Department of Metabolism Digestion and Reproduction, Imperial College London UK

4. Health Service Research Unit University of Aberdeen Aberdeen UK

5. Translational & Clinical Research Institute University of Newcastle upon Tyne Newcastle Upon Tyne UK

6. Department of Endocrinology Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust Newcastle Upon Tyne UK

7. School of Medicine, Medical Sciences and Nutrition University of Aberdeen Foresterhill Aberdeen UK

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundTestosterone is safe and highly effective in men with organic hypogonadism, but worldwide testosterone prescribing has recently shifted towards middle‐aged and older men, mostly with low testosterone related to age, diabetes and obesity, for whom there is less established evidence of clinical safety and benefit. The value of testosterone treatment in middle‐aged and older men with low testosterone is yet to be determined. We therefore evaluated the cost‐effectiveness of testosterone treatment in such men with low testosterone compared with no treatment.MethodsA cost‐utility analysis comparing testosterone with no treatment was conducted following best practices in decision modelling. A cohort Markov model incorporating relevant care pathways for individuals with hypogonadism was developed for a 10‐year‐time horizon. Clinical outcomes were obtained from an individual patient meta‐analysis of placebo‐controlled, double‐blind randomised studies. Three starting age categories were defined: 40, 60 and 75 years. Cost utility (quality‐adjusted life years) accrued and costs of testosterone treatment, monitoring and cardiovascular complications were compared to estimate incremental cost‐effectiveness ratios and cost‐effectiveness acceptability curves for selected scenarios.ResultsTen‐year excess treatment costs for testosterone compared with non‐treatment ranged between £2306 and £3269 per patient. Quality‐adjusted life years results depended on the instruments used to measure health utilities. Using Beck depression index‐derived quality‐adjusted life years data, testosterone was cost‐effective (incremental cost‐effectiveness ratio <£20,000) for men aged <75 years, regardless of morbidity and mortality sensitivity analyses. Testosterone was not cost‐effective in men aged >75 years in models assuming increased morbidity and/or mortality.Conclusions and future researchOur data suggest that testosterone is cost‐effective in men <75 years when Beck depression index‐derived quality‐adjusted life years data are considered; cost‐effectiveness in men >75 years is dependent on cardiovascular safety. However, more robust and longer‐term cost‐utility data are needed to verify our conclusion.

Funder

Health Technology Assessment programme

Medical Research Council

National Institute for Health and Care Research

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Urology,Endocrinology,Reproductive Medicine,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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