Deakin University
Browse

Quality of life related to oral versus subcutaneous iron chelation: a time trade-off study

Download (131.47 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2007-11-01, 00:00 authored by Richard Osborne, R De Abreu Lourenço, Andrew Dalton, J Houltram, D Dowton, D Joshua, R Lindeman, P Ho
<b>Objective:</b> To investigate the utility associated with subcutaneous infusion (deferoxamine) compared with once-daily oral administration (deferasirox) of iron chelation therapy.<br><br><b>Methods:</b> Interviews using the time trade-off technique were used to estimate preferences (utility) for health states by finding the point at which respondents were indifferent between a longer but lower quality of life (QoL) and a shorter time in full health. Participants (n = 110) were community-based, 51% women, median age 35 years, from four regions in Sydney, Australia. Respondents rated three health states involving equal outcomes for people with thalassemia but with different treatment modalities for iron chelation; an "anchor state" describing a patient receiving iron chelation without administration mode specified, anchor state plus iron chelation via subcutaneous infusion, and anchor state plus iron chelation through once-daily oral medication.<br><b><br>Results: </b>On an interval scale between 0 (death) and 1 (full health), median (interquartile range) utility of 0.80 (0.65–0.95) for the anchor state, 0.66 (0.45–0.87) for subcutaneous infusion, and 0.93 (0.80–0.97) for once-daily oral administration was obtained. The mean (median) difference of 0.23 (0.27) between the two treatments was statistically significant (Wilcoxon-signed rank test, P < 0.001). Subcutaneous infusion was associated with a mean (median) utility 0.13 (0.14) lower than the anchor state (P < 0.001), and once-daily oral treatment had a utility 0.10 (0.13) higher (P < 0.001).<br><b><br>Conclusion:</b> Community respondents associate oral administration of an iron chelator such as deferasirox with enhanced QoL compared with subcutaneous treatment. Assuming equal safety and efficacy, QoL gains from once-daily oral treatment compared with subcutaneous infusion are significant.<br>

History

Related Materials

Location

Malden, Mass.

Open access

  • Yes

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2007, International Society for Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes Research (ISPOR)

Journal

Value in health

Volume

10

Pagination

451 - 456

ISSN

1098-3015

eISSN

1524-4733

Usage metrics

    Research Publications

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC