Sánchez Fernández I, Gaínza-Lein M, Loddenkemper T.
Nonintravenous rescue medications for pediatric status epilepticus: A
cost-effectiveness analysis. Epilepsia. 2017 Aug;58(8):1349-1359.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE:
To quantify the cost-effectiveness of rescue medications for
pediatric status epilepticus: rectal diazepam, nasal midazolam, buccal
midazolam, intramuscular midazolam, and nasal lorazepam.
METHODS:
Decision analysis model populated with effectiveness data
from the literature and cost data from publicly available market prices. The
primary outcome was cost per seizure stopped ($/SS). One-way sensitivity
analyses and second-order Monte Carlo simulations evaluated the robustness of
the results across wide variations of the input parameters.
RESULTS:
The most cost-effective rescue medication was buccal
midazolam (incremental cost-effectiveness ratio ([ICER]: $13.16/SS) followed by
nasal midazolam (ICER: $38.19/SS). Nasal lorazepam (ICER: -$3.8/SS),
intramuscular midazolam (ICER: -$64/SS), and rectal diazepam (ICER:
-$2,246.21/SS) are never more cost-effective than the other options at any
willingness to pay. One-way sensitivity analysis showed the following: (1) at
its current effectiveness, rectal diazepam would become the most cost-effective
option only if its cost was $6 or less, and (2) at its current cost, rectal
diazepam would become the most cost-effective option only if effectiveness was
higher than 0.89 (and only with very high willingness to pay of $2,859/SS to
$31,447/SS). Second-order Monte Carlo simulations showed the following: (1)
nasal midazolam and intramuscular midazolam were the more effective options;
(2) the more cost-effective option was buccal midazolam for a willingness to
pay from $14/SS to $41/SS and nasal midazolam for a willingness to pay above
$41/SS; (3) cost-effectiveness overlapped for buccal midazolam, nasal
lorazepam, intramuscular midazolam, and nasal midazolam; and (4) rectal
diazepam was not cost-effective at any willingness to pay, and this conclusion remained
extremely robust to wide variations of the input parameters.
SIGNIFICANCE:
For pediatric status epilepticus, buccal midazolam and nasal
midazolam are the most cost-effective nonintravenous rescue medications in the
United States. Rectal diazepam is not a cost-effective alternative, and this
conclusion remains extremely robust to wide variations of the input parameters.
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