open access publication

Article, 2024

An economic evaluation of eptinezumab for the preventive treatment of migraine in the UK, with consideration for natural history and work productivity

The Journal of Headache and Pain, ISSN 1129-2377, 1129-2369, Volume 25, 1, Page 59, 10.1186/s10194-024-01749-8

Contributors

Griffin, Edward [1] Shirley, Gawain [2] Lee, Xin Ying 0000-0002-1102-3756 (Corresponding author) [3] Awad, Susanne Faissal 0000-0002-5060-7404 [3] Tyagi, Alok [4] Goadsby, Peter James 0000-0003-3260-5904 [5]

Affiliations

  1. [1] Exeter, UK
  2. [NORA names: United Kingdom; Europe, Non-EU; OECD];
  3. [2] Lundbeck Ltd, Watford, UK
  4. [NORA names: United Kingdom; Europe, Non-EU; OECD];
  5. [3] Lundbeck (Denmark)
  6. [NORA names: Lundbeck; Private Research; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD];
  7. [4] NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde
  8. [NORA names: United Kingdom; Europe, Non-EU; OECD];
  9. [5] King's College London
  10. [NORA names: United Kingdom; Europe, Non-EU; OECD]

Abstract

BackgroundMigraine is a highly prevalent neurological disease with a substantial societal burden due to lost productivity. From a societal perspective, we assessed the cost-effectiveness of eptinezumab for the preventive treatment of migraine.MethodsAn individual patient simulation of discrete competing events was developed to evaluate eptinezumab cost-effectiveness compared to best supportive care for adults in the United Kingdom with ≥ 4 migraine days per month and prior failure of ≥ 3 preventive migraine treatments. Individuals with sampled baseline characteristics were created to represent this population, which comprised dedicated episodic and chronic migraine subpopulations. Clinical efficacy, utility, and work productivity inputs were based on results from the DELIVER randomised controlled trial (NCT04418765). Timing of natural history events and treatment holidays—informed by the literature—were simulated to unmask any natural improvement of the disease unrelated to treatment. The primary outcomes were monthly migraine days, migraine-associated costs, quality-adjusted life years (QALYs), incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, and net monetary benefit, each evaluated over a 5-year time horizon from 2020. Secondary analyses explored a lifetime horizon and an alternative treatment stopping rule.ResultsTreatment with eptinezumab resulted in an average of 0.231 QALYs gained at a saving of £4,894 over 5 years, making eptinezumab dominant over best supportive care (i.e., better health outcomes and less costly). This result was confirmed by the probabilistic analysis and all alternative assumption scenarios under the same societal perspective. Univariate testing of inputs showed net monetary benefit was most sensitive to the number of days of productivity loss, and monthly salary.ConclusionsThis economic evaluation shows that from a societal perspective, eptinezumab is a cost-effective treatment in patients with ≥ 4 migraine days per month and for whom ≥ 3 other preventive migraine treatments have failed.Trial registrationN/A.Graphical Abstract

Keywords

BackgroundMigraine, ConclusionsThis, ConclusionsThis economic evaluation, Kingdom, UK, United Kingdom, adults, analysis, average, baseline characteristics, benefits, burden, care, characteristics, clinical efficacy, competing events, controlled trials, cost, cost-effective, cost-effective treatment, cost-effectiveness ratio, days, delivering, disease, economic evaluation, efficacy, eptinezumab, evaluation, events, failure, history, history events, horizon, improvement, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, individual patient simulation, individuals, input, life years, lifetime, lifetime horizon, loss, lost productivity, migraine, migraine days, migraine treatment, monetary benefits, monthly migraine days, monthly salary, months, natural history, natural history events, natural improvement, neurological diseases, outcomes, patient simulator, patients, perspective, population, preventive migraine treatment, preventive treatment, preventive treatment of migraine, primary outcome, probabilistic analysis, production, production inputs, productivity loss, quality-adjusted life years, randomised controlled trials, ratio, results, rules, salary, sample baseline characteristics, scenarios, secondary analysis, simulation, societal burden, societal perspective, stopping rule, subpopulations, supportive care, time, time horizon, treatment, treatment of migraine, trials, units, univariate tests, unrelated to treatment, work, work productivity, years

Funders

  • Lundbeck (Denmark)

Data Provider: Digital Science