Thromb Haemost 2008; 100(05): 810-820
DOI: 10.1160/TH08-04-0248
Blood Coagulation, Fibrinolysis and Cellular Haemostasis
Schattauer GmbH

Comparison of the two-year outcomes and costs of prophylaxis in medical patients at risk of venous thromboembolism

Steven B. Deitelzweig
1   Ochsner Hospital, New Orleans, Louisianna, USA
,
Russ Becker
2   IMS Health, Falls Church, Virginia, USA
,
Jay Lin
3   sanofi-aventis, Bridgewater, New Jersey, USA
,
Josh Benner
2   IMS Health, Falls Church, Virginia, USA
› Author Affiliations
Financial support: Financial and editorial support for this manuscript has been provided by sanofi-aventis US, Inc. Josh Benner and Russ Becker are employees at IMS Health. Jay Lin is an employee at sanofi-aventis US, Inc.
Further Information

Publication History

Received 21 April 2008

Accepted after minor revision 09 July 2008

Publication Date:
22 November 2017 (online)

Summary

A decision-analytic model incorporating a Markov process to assess the incremental cost and effectiveness of venous throm-boembolism (VTE) prevention strategies was used. Modeling was carried out using a hypothetical cohort of medical patients at risk of VTE.The model compared clinical effectiveness (primary and recurrent VTE, death), safety (adverse events), and direct medical costs between patients receiving enoxaparin prophylaxis, unfractionated heparin (UFH) prophylaxis, and no prophylaxis (n=10,000 for each arm). Monte Carlo simulation was performed to identify changes in inputs that would affect the results.The estimated incidence of VTE at two years (including recurrentVTE) was 6.8% with enoxaparin prophylaxis, 7.9% with UFH prophylaxis,and 17.9% with no prophylaxis.Two-year mortality occurred in 15.7% of enoxaparin patients and 16.0% of UFH patients, with the incidences of major bleeding in these groups being 0.7% and 1.2%, respectively. However, both enoxaparin and UFH prophylaxis were associated with higher rates of major bleeds than no prophylaxis (0.6%).Total average costs per patient were (US dollars) $1,264 (for enoxaparin prophylaxis, $1,585 for UFH prophylaxis,and $2,245 for no prophylaxis).No realistic parameter changes resulted in enoxaparin prophylaxis being more costly than UFH prophylaxis. For the healthcare payer, considering all direct medical costs associated with VTE up to two years after an admission for acute illness, prophylaxis with enoxaparin was more effective and less costly than UFH. This identifies enoxaparin as a potentially favorable VTE prophylaxis regimen compared with UFH and no prophylaxis in at-risk medical patients

 
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