Journal of Market Access & Health Policy (Jan 2021)

Economic evaluation of betibeglogene autotemcel (Beti-cel) gene addition therapy in transfusion-dependent β-thalassemia

  • Anuraag R. Kansal,
  • Odette S. Reifsnider,
  • Sarah B. Brand,
  • Neil Hawkins,
  • Anna Coughlan,
  • Shujun Li,
  • Lael Cragin,
  • Clark Paramore,
  • Andrew C. Dietz,
  • J. Jaime Caro

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/20016689.2021.1922028
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1

Abstract

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Background Standard of care (SoC) for transfusion-dependent β-thalassemia (TDT) requires lifelong, regular blood transfusions as well as chelation to reduce iron accumulation. Objective This study investigates the cost-effectiveness of betibeglogene autotemcel (‘beti-cel’; LentiGlobin for β-thalassemia) one-time, gene addition therapy compared to lifelong SoC for TDT. Study design Microsimulation model simulated the lifetime course of TDT based on a causal sequence in which transfusion requirements determine tissue iron levels, which in turn determine risk of iron overload complications that increase mortality. Clinical trial data informed beti-cel clinical parameters; effects of SoC on iron levels came from real-world studies; iron overload complication rates and mortality were based on published literature. Setting USA; commercial payer perspective Participants TDT patients age 2–50 Interventions Beti-cel is compared to SoC. Main outcome measure Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) utilizing quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) Results The model predicts beti-cel adds 3.8 discounted life years (LYs) or 6.9 QALYs versus SoC. Discounted lifetime costs were $2.28 M for beti-cel ($572,107 if excluding beti-cel cost) and $2.04 M for SoC, with a resulting ICER of $34,833 per QALY gained. Conclusion Beti-cel is cost-effective for TDT patients compared to SoC. This is due to longer survival and cost offset of lifelong SoC.

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