ClinicoEconomics and Outcomes Research (Apr 2022)
Clinical and Economic Benefits of Lenzilumab Plus Standard of Care Compared with Standard of Care Alone for the Treatment of Hospitalized Patients with Coronavirus Disease 19 (COVID-19) from the Perspective of National Health Service England
Abstract
Adrian Kilcoyne,1 Edward Jordan,1 Kimberly Thomas,2 Alicia N Pepper,2 Allen Zhou,2 Dale Chappell,1 Miyuru Amarapala,1 Rachel-Karson Thériault,2 Melissa Thompson2 1HEOR, Humanigen Inc, Burlingame, CA, USA; 2Value & Evidence Services, EVERSANA, Burlington, Ontario, CanadaCorrespondence: Adrian Kilcoyne, HEOR, Humanigen Inc, Burlingame, CA, USA, Tel +1-848-240-6613, Email [email protected]: To estimate the clinical and economic benefits of lenzilumab plus standard of care (SOC) compared with SOC alone in the treatment of hospitalized COVID-19 patients from the National Health Service (NHS) England perspective.Methods: A cost calculator was developed to estimate the clinical benefits and costs of adding lenzilumab to SOC in newly hospitalized COVID-19 patients over 28 days. The LIVE-AIR trial results informed the clinical inputs: failure to achieve survival without ventilation (SWOV), mortality, time to recovery, intensive care unit (ICU) admission, and invasive mechanical ventilation (IMV) use. Base case costs included drug acquisition and administration for lenzilumab and remdesivir and hospital resource costs based on the level of care required. Clinical and economic benefits per weekly cohort of newly hospitalized patients were also estimated.Results: In all populations examined, specified clinical outcomes were improved with lenzilumab plus SOC over SOC treatment alone. In a base case population aged < 85 years with C-reactive protein (CRP) < 150 mg/L, with or without remdesivir, adding lenzilumab to SOC was estimated to result in per-patient cost savings of £ 1162. In a weekly cohort of 4754 newly hospitalized patients, addition of lenzilumab to SOC could result in 599 IMV uses avoided, 352 additional lives saved, and over £ 5.5 million in cost savings. Scenario results for per-patient cost savings included: 1) aged < 85 years, CRP < 150 mg/L, and receiving remdesivir (£ 3127); 2) Black patients with CRP < 150 mg/L (£ 9977); and 3) Black patients from the full population (£ 2369). Conversely, in the full mITT population, results estimated additional cost of £ 4005 per patient.Conclusion: Findings support clinical benefits for SWOV, mortality, time to recovery, time in ICU, time on IMV, and ventilator use, and an economic benefit from the NHS England perspective when adding lenzilumab to SOC for hospitalized COVID-19 patients.Keywords: economic analysis, CRP, GM-CSF, ventilator-free survival, survival without ventilation, invasive mechanical ventilation