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Dive into the research topics where Tim Holbrook is active.

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Featured researches published by Tim Holbrook.


Journal of Medical Economics | 2016

Assessing the impact of nocturia on health-related quality-of-life and utility : results of an observational survey in adults

Fredrik Andersson; Peter Anderson; Tove Holm-Larsen; James Piercy; Karel Everaert; Tim Holbrook

Abstract Background and aim: The impact of nocturia (getting up at night to void) on health-related quality-of-life (HRQoL) is often under-estimated. This study investigated the relative burden in terms of HRQoL and utilities of nocturia in a real-world setting. Methods: Patient data were collected from two surveys: a nocturia-specific, cross-sectional survey of physicians and their patients (DSP), and a general UK population health survey (HSFE). Utilities (EQ-5D-5L), productivity (Work Productivity and Activity Index), and the impact of nocturia symptoms (Nocturia Impact Diary and Overactive Bladder Questionnaires) were assessed against the number of voids. A robust linear regression model with propensity score weights was used to control for confounding factors in estimating utilities. Results: Physician-recorded data were available from 8,738 patients across the US, Germany, Spain, France, and the UK; of these, 5,335 (61%) included patient-reported outcomes. In total, 6,302 controls were drawn from the two surveys and compared to 1,104 nocturia patients. Deterioration of HRQoL was associated with increasing number of night-time voids (p < 0.0001). In particular, significant differences were observed between 0–1 and ≥2 voids (p < 0.001). The regression model demonstrated that nocturia (≥2 per night) is associated with a modest but significant deterioration in utility of 0.0134 (p < 0.05). Limitations: The cause of nocturia is multifactorial and the mostly elderly patients may have several concomitant diseases. The authors tried to adjust for the most common ones, but there may be diseases or unknown relationships not included. Conclusions: Nocturia negatively affected HRQoL and patient utility. A clear effect is seen already at two voids per night. Every effort should, therefore, be made to reduce nocturia below the bother threshold of two voids per night.


International Journal of Clinical Practice | 2016

Prevalence and burden of dyspnoea among COPD patients in Japan

Mark Small; Tim Holbrook; Robert Wood; Hana Müllerova; Ian Naya; Yogesh Suresh Punekar

Dyspnoea is the most common symptom of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) significantly affecting activity, impairing patients’ well‐being and contributing to the economic burden of COPD. The objective of this study was to estimate the prevalence of dyspnoea and its impact on COPD management costs in Japan.


BMJ Open | 2016

Evidence for validity of a national physician and patient-reported, cross-sectional survey in China and UK: the Disease Specific Programme

S.M. Babineaux; Bradley Curtis; Tim Holbrook; Gary Milligan; James Piercy

Objective Diabetes represents a significant challenge for Chinese healthcare providers. Healthcare decision-making is generally based on many data sources, including randomised controlled and real-world studies; however, good-quality data from Chinese diabetes patients are scarce. We performed an initial validation to assess the representativeness of one source of real-world data—the Diabetes Adelphi Disease Specific Programme (DSP) in China. Setting China, UK. Participants The Chinese DSP included 2060 patients with previously diagnosed type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) sampled by 200 physicians. The reference Chinese population comprised 238 639 patients with previously diagnosed T2DM. The UK DSP contained 1481 patients with T2DM sampled by 125 physicians; the reference UK population comprised 289 patients with diabetes. Primary and secondary outcomes The primary outcome was comparison of unweighted China DSP and reference data for sex, body mass index (BMI), blood pressure (BP), patients achieving glycosylated haemoglobin (HbA1c)<7%, total cholesterol, coronary heart disease and dyslipidaemia. The secondary outcome was comparison of weighted UK DSP and reference data for BMI, BP, mean HbA1c, total cholesterol, smoking and insulin status. Results Comparison of unweighted China DSP and reference data revealed statistical equivalence for BMI, systolic BP, proportion of patients achieving HbA1c <7%, total cholesterol, coronary heart disease and dyslipidaemia. Sex, age, diabetes duration, diastolic BP and mean HbA1c level were not equivalent, although differences were generally small. Weighting of data did not substantially affect the results. A similar pattern was observed for UK data. Conclusions This study provides evidence that the methodology used for the China and UK parts of the Diabetes DSP produces representative samples that are comparable with other independent sources of patient treatment outcomes data, which may ultimately inform public health decision-making. Although this method could be used in other countries, the current validation applies to UK and China. Further research is required for other countries.


International Journal of Clinical Practice | 2017

Direct medical costs of severe hypoglycaemic events in patients with type 2 diabetes in England: A retrospective database study

Tim Holbrook; Yuexin Tang; Romita Das; R. Ravi Shankar; Kaan Tunceli; Jean Williams; Larry Radican; Sarah E. Holden; Christopher Ll. Morgan; James Piercy; Craig John Currie

Hypoglycaemia in patients with diabetes can be induced by insulins and sulfonylureas. We assessed the real‐world impact of specific monotherapy and combination regimens on hypoglycaemic events requiring hospitalisation and related secondary costs to the English healthcare system.


Journal of Medical Economics | 2017

Bronchodilator reliever use and its association with the economic and humanistic burden of COPD: a propensity-matched study

Yogesh Suresh Punekar; Ian Naya; Mark Small; Tim Holbrook; Robert Wood; Hana Müllerova; Manuel Valle

Abstract Background and aims: Short-acting bronchodilators are normally used as supplemental relief medication for breakthrough symptoms in COPD patients. The objective of this cross-sectional study was to assess if more frequent vs infrequent use of relief medication in maintenance-treated COPD patients, split by the severity dyspnea, was associated with an increase in the overall disease burden. Methods: A population-based cross-sectional survey (Adelphi DSP) was conducted among patients with COPD in five European countries. Information was collected on demographic and clinical characteristics, reliever inhaler use, dyspnea (mMRC), health status (CAT, EQ-5D), sleep quality (JSEQ) and healthcare resource use including moderate–severe COPD exacerbations, physician visits, COPD medications and other COPD related resources. The humanistic and economic burden was compared between patients with infrequent reliever use (<1 occasion/week) and more frequent use (≥ 1 occasion/week). The association between increased reliever use and economic burden was also examined after matching patients based on propensity-scores balancing demographic and disease burden characteristics. Results: Among the 1373 COPD patients prescribed a reliever inhaler, 29% reported using reliever medication ≥1 occasion/week. In the unmatched cohort, more frequent reliever use (n = 377) compared to infrequent use (n = 996) was linked to poorer health status (CAT: 25.7 vs 20.0; p < .0001; EQ-5D-3L: 0.63 vs 0.82; p < .0001) and poorer sleep quality (JSEQ: 8.6 vs 4.6 units; p < .0001). More frequent reliever use was also associated with higher annual rates of moderate/severe exacerbations (1.6 vs 1.0 events/year; p < .0001) and respiratory specialist visits (2.8 vs 2.2 events/year; p = .0001). In the propensity-score matched population, more frequent reliever use was also associated with significantly higher annual costs for COPD management (€5,034 vs €3,705, p = .0327) compared to patients with infrequent reliever use. Conclusion: In moderate-to-severe COPD, more frequent reliever use is associated with increased exacerbation risk and increased management costs.


Journal of Medical Economics | 2017

The cost of warfarin treatment for stroke prevention in patients with non-valvular atrial fibrillation in Mexico from a collective perspective.

Jean Baptiste Briere; Kevin Bowrin; Robert Wood; Tim Holbrook; Jenna Roberts

Abstract Aims: To describe the collective costs of vitamin K antagonist (VKA) treatment for stroke prevention in non-valvular atrial fibrillation (NVAF). VKA drug costs are relatively low, but they necessitate frequent international normalized ratio (INR) monitoring. There are currently minimal data describing the economic impact of this in Mexico. Materials and methods: Cardiologists provided data on their NVAF patients (n = 400) to quantify direct medical costs (INR testing, appointments, drug costs). A sub-set of patients (n = 301) completed a patient questionnaire providing data to calculate direct non-medical costs (travel and other expenses for attendance at VKA-associated appointments) and indirect costs (opportunity cost and reduced work productivity associated with VKA treatment). Results: Estimated annual direct medical costs totaled


Value in health regional issues | 2018

Cost Effectiveness of Dolutegravir as a First-Line Treatment Option in the HIV-1–Infected Treatment-Naive Patients in Russia

Gabriel Tremblay; Vasiliki Chounta; James Piercy; Tim Holbrook; Shan Ashton Garib; Evgeny K. Bukin; Yogesh Suresh Punekar

753.6 per patient. Annual direct non-medical and indirect costs were USD


Comparative Effectiveness Research | 2016

Matching-adjusted indirect treatment comparison in patients with radioiodine-refractory differentiated thyroid cancer

Gabriel Tremblay; Tim Holbrook; Gary Milligan; Corey Pelletier; Petra Rietschel

149.8 and


Pulmonary Therapy | 2016

Prevalence and Burden of Dyspnoea Among Patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease in Five European Countries

Yogesh Suresh Punekar; Hana Müllerova; Mark Small; Tim Holbrook; Robert Wood; Ian Naya; Manuel Valle

132.1, respectively. Limitations: Recruited patients were those who consulted with a cardiologist during the study period and selected due to inclusion criteria. All had received uninterrupted treatment for 12–24 months. Consequently, the results are not fully generalizable to all VKA treated NVAF patients. Conclusions: The true cost of VKA treatment cannot be appreciated by a consideration of drug costs alone. Ongoing monitoring appointments incur additional expenses for both patients and the healthcare system.


Value in Health | 2017

Cost-Effectiveness Of Dolutegravir In HIV-1 Treatment-Naive Patients In Russia

James Piercy; Rafal Jakubanis; V Chounta; E Bukin; N Kovalchuk; Ys Punekar; Tim Holbrook

OBJECTIVES To evaluate the cost effectiveness of dolutegravir + abacavir/lamivudine (DTG + ABC/3TC) compared with raltegravir + abacavir/lamivudine (RAL + ABC/3TC) and ritonavir-boosted darunavir + abacavir/lamivudine (DRV/r + ABC/3TC) in HIV-1-infected treatment-naive patients in Russia. METHODS A dynamic Markov model was developed with five response states and six CD4+-based health states. Efficacy estimated as probability of viral suppression (HIV RNA <50 copies/ml) at 48 weeks was obtained from a published network meta-analysis. Baseline cohort characteristics and health state utilities were informed using DTG phase 3 clinical trials. Health care resource use was obtained from literature and costed using published unit costs. Costs (presented in Russian rubles) included antiretroviral drug costs; HIV management costs such as routine care; costs of treating cardiovascular conditions, opportunistic infections, and drug-related adverse effects; and mortality costs. A patient lifetime analysis was conducted using the societal perspective. Outcomes were quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs), life-years, incremental cost per QALY ratio, and incremental cost per responder. RESULTS The viral suppression rate among patients receiving DTG + ABC/3TC was 71.7% compared with 65.2% for RAL + ABC/3TC and 59.6% for DRV/r + ABC/3TC. The mean duration of response per patient was 116.6 months for DTG + ABC/3TC, 108.6 months for RAL + ABC/3TC, and 98.9 months for DRV/r + ABC/3TC. Total discounted costs for treatment over patient lifetime were RUB 2.89, 5.32, and 4.38 million for DTG + ABC/3TC, RAL + ABC/3TC, and DRV/r + ABC/3TC, respectively. Lifetime discounted QALYs were 12.73 for patients on DTG + ABC/3TC and 12.72 each for patients on RAL + ABC/3TC and DRV/r + ABC/3TC. DTG + ABC/3TC thus dominated the other two alternatives. CONCLUSIONS With lower costs, higher response rates, and comparable QALYs, DTG + ABC/3TC can be considered as a cost-effective alternative.

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