Costs and efficacy of three different esomeprazole treatment strategies for long-term management of gastro-oesophageal reflux symptoms in primary care
Udgivelsens forfattere:
- Villy Meineche-Schmidt
- Henrik Hauschildt Juhl
- J.E. Østergaard
- Anders Luckow
- Anne Hvenegaard
Ældre
Arbejdsmarked
Ledelse og implementering
Økonomi og styring
Børn, unge og familie
Sundhed
Ældre, Arbejdsmarked, Ledelse og implementering, Økonomi og styring, Børn, unge og familie, Sundhed
Aim: To assess the differences in direct medical costs between a patient-controlled on-demand treatment strategy with esomeprazole, 20 mg daily, and general practitioner-controlled intermittent treatment strategies with esomeprazole, 40 mg daily, for either 2 or 4 weeks. Secondary objectives were to measure other costs, total costs, patient satisfaction and time to first relapse.
Methods: The primary cost analysis was carried out as a cost minimization analysis, comparing the direct medical costs in patients allocated to on-demand treatment vs. those in patients allocated to either of the intermittent treatment strategies.
Results: The mean direct medical costs were 182, 221 and 195 euros for patient-controlled on-demand treatment and 2 weeks and 4 weeks of general practitioner-controlled intermittent treatment, respectively, showing no statistically significant difference. The comparable mean total costs were 211, 344 and 300 euros, i.e. significantly lower for patients treated on-demand compared with either of the general practitioner-controlled intermittent treatment strategies.
Conclusions: The mean total costs, but not the mean direct medical costs, were higher in general practitioner-controlled intermittent treatment strategies with esomeprazole compared with a patient-controlled on-demand treatment strategy.
Udgivelsens forfattere
- Villy Meineche-SchmidtHenrik Hauschildt JuhlJ.E. ØstergaardAnders LuckowAnne Hvenegaard
Om denne udgivelse
Publiceret i
Alimentary Pharmacology and Therapeutics