Intravenous or subcutaneous natalizumab in patients with relapsing–remitting multiple sclerosis: investigation on efficiency and savings—the EASIER study
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Published:2023-09-16
Issue:1
Volume:271
Page:340-354
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ISSN:0340-5354
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Container-title:Journal of Neurology
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language:en
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Short-container-title:J Neurol
Author:
Filippi MassimoORCID, Grimaldi Luigi, Conte Antonella, Totaro Rocco, Valente Maria Rosaria, Malucchi Simona, Granella Franco, Cordioli Cinzia, Brescia Morra Vincenzo, Zanetta Chiara, Perini Daria, Santoni Laura, Ziccone V., Garba R., Motta A., Albanesi S., Oddo O., Impagliato A., Ferrazzano G., Di Rosa V., Tartaglia M., Di Vito A., Galassi A., Prota R., Garbo R., Del Negro I., Nesi L., Capobianco M., Tsantes E., Agosta R., Valleri A. M., Galuppini L., Mascara S., Bertocchi F., Chiarini E., Moccia M., Puorro G.,
Abstract
Abstract
Introduction
EASIER is a multicenter, observational, cross-sectional study investigating the consumption of healthcare resources, including healthcare professional (HCP) active working time, the costs associated with the current natalizumab intravenous (IV) administration, and the potential impact of the adoption of subcutaneous (SC) route.
Methods
The EASIER study has three parts: (1) time and motion study to measure healthcare resources and working time needed for natalizumab IV administration using a digital data collection tool operated directly by HCPs; (2) HCP structured questionnaire-based estimation of the potential impact of natalizumab SC vs. IV administration; and (3) patient survey on the burden of natalizumab administration.
Results
Nine Italian multiple sclerosis (MS) centers measured 404 IV natalizumab administration procedures and administered 26 HCP questionnaires and 297 patient questionnaires. Patients had a mean of 52 (range 1–176) previous IV administrations and spent a mean (median, IQR) of 152 (130, 94–184) minutes in the center per each IV procedure, with IV infusion covering 50% of the total. Including patient travel time, an average of 5 h was dedicated to each IV administration. Active working time by HCP amounted to 29 min per IV administration procedure, 70% of which by nursing staff.
With adoption of the SC route, HCPs estimated a 50% reduction in patient procedure time and 55% lower HCP active working time. This translated into a 63% cost reduction for the MS center per natalizumab administration procedure.
Conclusions
SC natalizumab administration will consistently reduce consumption of patient and HCP times per procedure and associated costs.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Neurology (clinical),Neurology
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