Abstract
Purpose: Several antithrombotic therapies are available for the treatment of patients with peripheral vascular diseases. It is unknown how quality of life and costs of treatment are influenced by different therapies. This study assessed the cost-effectiveness of oral anticoagulants versus aspirin in patients after infrainguinal bypass grafting surgery. Methods: Clinical outcome events and event-free survival were collected from 2650 patients in 77 centers who participated in the Dutch Bypass Oral anticoagulants or Aspirin trial. Approximately half the patients had critical ischemia; 60% received vein grafts, and 20% had femorocrural bypass grafts. A model that was primarily driven by clinical outcome events was used as a means of determining quality of life (EuroQol EQ-5D) and costs for each patient. The main outcome measure was the incremental health care costs in relation to the additional number of quality-adjusted life years and the additional number of event-free years. Results: The mean costs during the 21 months of follow-up were ∈ 6875 per patient in the oral anticoagulants group versus ∈ 7072 in the aspirin group. The event-free survival was 1.10 years in the group treated with oral anticoagulants versus 1.09 years in the group treated with aspirin, whereas the corresponding quality-adjusted life years were 1.06 and 1.05, respectively. Conclusion: Health care costs, event-free survival, and quality-adjusted life years in patients after infrainguinal bypass surgery were not different in patients treated with aspirin and patients treated with oral anticoagulants. The extra costs of monitoring patients treated with oral anticoagulants were limited and play no role in the decision for treatment.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 254-262 |
| Number of pages | 9 |
| Journal | Journal of Vascular Surgery |
| Volume | 34 |
| Issue number | 2 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - Aug 2001 |
| Externally published | Yes |
Bibliographical note
Copyright © 2001 by The Society for Vascular Surgery and The American Association for Vascular SurgeryFingerprint
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