Cost-effectiveness analysis of patent foramen ovale closure versus medical therapy alone after cryptogenic stroke.

Authors
Category Primary study
Pre-printmedRxiv
Year 2021
BackgroundClosure of a patent foramen ovale reduces the risk of recurrent stroke compared with medical therapy alone in young patients with cryptogenic strokes revealed by randomized control trials. Some cost-effectiveness analyses outside Japan have shown that patent foramen ovale closure is cost-effective, but no studies have examined cost-effectiveness in Japan. The objective of this study is to assess cost-effectiveness, from the perspective of a Japanese healthcare payer, of patent foramen ovale closure versus medical therapy alone for the patients with patent foramen ovale related cryptogenic strokes. MethodsA cost-effectiveness study was conducted by developing a decision tree and a Markov model. Probabilities and a 5.9-year time horizon followed the RESPECT study. Utilities and costs were based upon published studies and assumptions. The model cycle was one month. All assumptions were assessed by experts, including a cardiologist and a statistical expert. The target population comprised patients with cryptogenic stroke and patent foramen ovale, aged 60 years or younger. Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio was evaluated. Then one-way sensitivity analyses and probabilistic sensitivity analyses were conducted to assess robustness. ResultsIncremental cost-effectiveness ratio of patent foramen ovale closure compared with medical therapy was estimated at {yen}3,318,152 per quality-adjusted life years gained. One-way sensitivity analysis showed that the stable state utility score difference between patent foramen ovale closure and medical therapy had the largest impact on incremental cost-effectiveness ratio. Patent foramen ovale closure is cost-effective at a stable state utility score difference of >0.051, compared with medical therapy. Probabilistic sensitivity analyses demonstrated that patent foramen ovale closure was 50.3% cost-effective with a willingness-to-pay threshold of {yen}5,000,000 / quality-adjusted life years. ConclusionsFrom a healthcare payer perspective, patent foramen ovale closure may be cost-effective compared with medical therapy for Japanese patients with cryptogenic stroke who were [≤]60 years.
Epistemonikos ID: 1213b38adf17bf3c81ac8183171a12f8ec3b65b4
First added on: Jan 13, 2025