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Drug Profile

Cost–effectiveness of raltegravir in HIV/AIDS

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Pages 627-639 | Published online: 09 Jan 2014
 

Abstract

Raltegravir is a first-in-class HIV-1 integrase inhibitor with established antiviral efficacy in treatment-naive and treatment-experienced patients with multidrug-resistant HIV-1 infection. In this article, we summarize pharmacoeconomic evaluations of raltegravir-based treatment regimens, compared with alternative therapies, in the treatment of patients with HIV infection and/or AIDS. Cost–effectiveness evaluations of raltegravir in treatment-experienced patients conducted using a continuous-time, state-transition Markov cohort model suggest that raltegravir, combined with optimized background therapy, falls within the range that would generally be considered cost effective compared with optimized therapy alone in Spanish, Swiss and UK health systems. In treatment-naive populations, raltegravir was evaluated using a three-stage continuous-time state-transition cohort model. Raltegravir-based initiation treatment strategies (first-line raltegravir) were compared with protease inhibitor and non-nucleoside reverse-transcriptase inhibitor initiation strategies, in which raltegravir was retained for salvage therapy. First-line raltegravir was cost-effective versus retaining raltegravir for salvage therapy in several European populations. A separate economic model was used to evaluate first-line raltegravir against two alternative initiation regimens representing standard clinical practice in Australia; raltegravir proved to be cost effective in both scenarios. In all studies examined, results were sensitive to factors including treatment duration, mortality rate, analytic time horizon, health utility weights, cost of raltegravir and optimized therapy, incidence of opportunistic infection and discount rates. Nonetheless, raltegravir remained cost effective under most scenarios.

Acknowledgements

The authors take full responsibility for this paper but are grateful to Watermeadow Medical, supported by Merck & Co., Inc., for editorial assistance in the preparation of this manuscript. We also thank the journal reviewers for their thoughtful and constructive comments, which improved the quality of the final manuscript.

Financial & competing interests disclosure

MA Chaudhary, EH Elbasha and RN Kumar are employees of Merck & Co., Inc. E Nathanson is an employee of Watermeadow Medical, which received financial support from Merck & Co., Inc. for preparation of this manuscript. The authors have no other relevant affiliations or financial involvement with any organization or entity with a financial interest in or financial conflict with the subject matter or materials discussed in the manuscript apart from those disclosed.

Writing assistance from Watermeadow Medical was utilized in the production of this manuscript, funded by Merck & Co., Inc.

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