Objective:
To compare the cost-effectiveness of non-myeloablative haploidentical allogeneic stem cell transplantation (NMAC-HID allo-HSCT), gene therapy, and standard care for adults with sickle cell disease.
Approach:
- Gene therapy provided the highest projected health benefit at 22.1 quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) but at a cost of $2.75 million.
- NMAC-HID allo-HSCT resulted in 20.1 QALYs at a cost of $1.15 million.
- Standard care yielded 14.3 QALYs at a cost of $1.22 million.
- The US threshold price for gene therapy was estimated to be $627,000 to $740,000, a significant reduction from current pricing.
- In lower-income countries, gene therapy thresholds ranged from $24,000 to $35,000.
- Long-term safety and efficacy data for gene therapy and NMAC-HID allo-HSCT are limited.
- The model lacked patient-level data across trials.
- Assumed patients had a viable donor and no prohibitive donor-specific antibodies.
- Did not include costs for fertility preservation.
- Relied on public gene therapy list prices instead of negotiated prices.
Key Findings:
Interpretation:
NMAC-HID allo-HSCT was found to deliver the best clinical value for cost compared to gene therapy and standard care.
Limitations:
Conclusion:
Cost-effectiveness data should inform policy decisions without limiting patient choice, and all treatment options should be discussed with patients.
Sources:
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