CardioVascular and Interventional Radiology | 2019

Cost-Effectiveness of Drug-Eluting Stents for Infrapopliteal Lesions in Patients with Critical Limb Ischemia: The PADI Trial

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Purpose Drug-eluting stents (DES) improve clinical and morphological long-term results compared to percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA) with bailout bare metal stenting (BMS) in patients with critical limb ischemia (CLI) and infrapopliteal lesions (PADI trial). We performed a cost-effectiveness analysis of DES compared to PTA\xa0±\xa0BMS in cooperation with Dutch health insurance company VGZ, using data from the PADI trial. Materials and Methods In the PADI trial, adults with CLI (Rutherford category ≥\xa04) and infrapopliteal lesions were randomized to receive DES with paclitaxel or PTA\xa0±\xa0BMS. Seventy-four limbs (73 patients) were treated with DES and 66 limbs (64 patients) with PTA\xa0±\xa0BMS. The costs were calculated by using the mean costs per stent multiplied by the mean number of stents used per patient (€750\u2009×\u20091.8 for DES vs €250\u2009×\u20090.3 for PTA\xa0±\xa0BMS). These costs were compared with the costs of major amputation (€16.000) and rehabilitation (first year €15.750, second year €7.375 and third year €3.600). Results The 5-year major amputation rate was lower in the DES group (19.3% vs 34.0% for PTA\xa0±\xa0BMS; p\u2009 =\u20090.091). In addition, the 5-year amputation-free survival and event-free survival were significantly higher in the DES group (31.8% vs 20.4%, p =0.043; and 26.2% vs 15.3%, p =0.041, respectively). After 1\xa0year, the cost difference per patient between DES and PTA\xa0±\xa0BMS is €1.679 in favor of DES and €2.694 after 3\xa0years. Conclusion In our analysis, DES are cost-effective due to the higher hospital costs of amputation and rehabilitation in the PTA\xa0±\xa0BMS group. Level of Evidence Level 1b, analysis based on clinically sensible costs and randomized controlled trial.

Volume 43
Pages 376-381
DOI 10.1007/s00270-019-02385-5
Language English
Journal CardioVascular and Interventional Radiology

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