Affiliation:
1. Graduate School of Medicine, The University of Tokyo
2. The University of Tokyo
3. Graduate of Medicine and Faculty of Medicine, The University of Tokyo
Abstract
Abstract
Background/Objectives:
This study aimed to compare the cost-effectiveness of prophylactic laser peripheral iridotomy (LPI) with that of observation for primary angle-closure suspect (PACS) in Japan.
Subjects/Methods:
A Markov model was developed to compare the costs and utilities of prophylactic LPI with those of observation of 40-year-old patients with PACS. In the model with a yearly cycle over a 20-year time horizon, the disease was postulated to irreversibly progress from PACS to primary angle closure, followed by primary angle-closure glaucoma, unilateral blindness, and bilateral blindness. The parameters were estimated based on a recent randomised controlled trial and analyses of Japanese claims data. The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio was estimated from the healthcare payer’s perspective and evaluated as the willingness-to-pay 5 million Japanese Yen per quality-adjusted life-year. The observation period was shortened, and the age at entry into the cohort was changed to 50 years in the sensitivity analyses. We conducted one-way deterministic sensitivity analysis and probabilistic sensitivity analysis with Monte Carlo simulations with 10 000 iterations.
Results
The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of LPI was 2 270 224 Japanese Yen (14 189 pounds sterling) per quality-adjusted life-year, which was below the willingness-to-pay threshold. The ratios were approximately 4 and 8 million in the 15-year and 10-year time horizons, respectively. Increasing the age at entry had little influence on the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio. The deterministic and probabilistic sensitivity analyses indicated that the results were robust.
Conclusions
Our results indicate that prophylactic LPI for middle-aged patients with PACS is cost-effective in Japan.
Publisher
Research Square Platform LLC