Events Calendar

14 Apr
Dissertation Defense: Jeremy Tyler Adams
Event Type

Defenses

University Unit
Department of Health Policy and Management
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Dissertation Defense: Jeremy Tyler Adams

This is a past event.

Cost-Effectiveness Analysis of Extended-Release Medications for Opioid Use Disorder: Comparing Single-Drug and Multi-Drug-in-Sequence Treatment Strategies 

Public Health/Health Policy and Management

Committee: 
Julie M. Donohue, HPM (advisor, dissertation director)
Cindy L. Bryce, HPM
Julie W. Childers, Medicine
Kenneth J. Smith, Medicine
 

Abstract:
Extended-release medications for opioid use disorder (ERMOUD) are newer additions to combat the opioid epidemic. While more expensive than daily-administered formulations, they offer unique advantages.  These include lessening the burden and constraints of daily adherence, improving treatment retention, and potentially improving long term remission, along with eliminating the risk of drug diversion and fatal accidental poisoning in children.

Opioid use disorder (OUD) is now viewed as a chronic medical condition, requiring long-term treatment, expectant of relapses and illicit reuse, and multiple treatment strategies and trials.  Therefore, it is important to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of these newer extended-release medications, along with the daily-administered formulations, in the context of this newly adopted disease paradigm.

In Chapter One, we performed a cost-effectiveness analysis of ERMOUDs in both single-drug and multi-drug-in-sequence treatment strategies, allowing for readmission and transition to another drug regimen upon discontinuation or attrition due to illicit opioid use.  Prior economic models did not allow treatment reentry nor switching.  We found that ERMOUD multi-drug-in-sequence combination treatment strategies prove more cost-effective than single-drug ERMOUD treatment strategies and are a cost-effective alternative to daily administration MOUD regimens.

We triplicated our model in Chapter Two to compare three different drug pricing schedules: Wholesale Acquisition Costs (WAC), Drug Manufacturer’s Net Price (DMN), and Medicaid Rebate-Adjusted Prices (MRA).  We found that using MRA prices, which represents the majority of OUD patients, increases the viability and cost-effective competitiveness of ERMOUDs, while closer approximating real-world pricing conditions.

We further expanded our model in Chapter Three to include the original mainstays of MOUD, Methadone and Buprenorphine Maintenance Treatments, both singly and in multi-drug-in-sequence combinations.  Thus, we were able to conduct a comprehensive cost-effectiveness analysis on essentially all available MOUD treatment strategies, allowing for readmission and drug switching.  We found that, while the newer ERMOUDs are an important addition to the treatment options of OUD, and provide unique clinical advantages over the daily formulations, the single-drug BMT-only treatment strategy tested as the most cost-effective, at least until the price of both extended-release and daily formulations better align with their demonstrated benefits.

Dial-In Information

Contact Adams for Zoom information 

Wednesday, April 14 at 3:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.

Virtual Event

Dissertation Defense: Jeremy Tyler Adams

Cost-Effectiveness Analysis of Extended-Release Medications for Opioid Use Disorder: Comparing Single-Drug and Multi-Drug-in-Sequence Treatment Strategies 

Public Health/Health Policy and Management

Committee: 
Julie M. Donohue, HPM (advisor, dissertation director)
Cindy L. Bryce, HPM
Julie W. Childers, Medicine
Kenneth J. Smith, Medicine
 

Abstract:
Extended-release medications for opioid use disorder (ERMOUD) are newer additions to combat the opioid epidemic. While more expensive than daily-administered formulations, they offer unique advantages.  These include lessening the burden and constraints of daily adherence, improving treatment retention, and potentially improving long term remission, along with eliminating the risk of drug diversion and fatal accidental poisoning in children.

Opioid use disorder (OUD) is now viewed as a chronic medical condition, requiring long-term treatment, expectant of relapses and illicit reuse, and multiple treatment strategies and trials.  Therefore, it is important to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of these newer extended-release medications, along with the daily-administered formulations, in the context of this newly adopted disease paradigm.

In Chapter One, we performed a cost-effectiveness analysis of ERMOUDs in both single-drug and multi-drug-in-sequence treatment strategies, allowing for readmission and transition to another drug regimen upon discontinuation or attrition due to illicit opioid use.  Prior economic models did not allow treatment reentry nor switching.  We found that ERMOUD multi-drug-in-sequence combination treatment strategies prove more cost-effective than single-drug ERMOUD treatment strategies and are a cost-effective alternative to daily administration MOUD regimens.

We triplicated our model in Chapter Two to compare three different drug pricing schedules: Wholesale Acquisition Costs (WAC), Drug Manufacturer’s Net Price (DMN), and Medicaid Rebate-Adjusted Prices (MRA).  We found that using MRA prices, which represents the majority of OUD patients, increases the viability and cost-effective competitiveness of ERMOUDs, while closer approximating real-world pricing conditions.

We further expanded our model in Chapter Three to include the original mainstays of MOUD, Methadone and Buprenorphine Maintenance Treatments, both singly and in multi-drug-in-sequence combinations.  Thus, we were able to conduct a comprehensive cost-effectiveness analysis on essentially all available MOUD treatment strategies, allowing for readmission and drug switching.  We found that, while the newer ERMOUDs are an important addition to the treatment options of OUD, and provide unique clinical advantages over the daily formulations, the single-drug BMT-only treatment strategy tested as the most cost-effective, at least until the price of both extended-release and daily formulations better align with their demonstrated benefits.

Dial-In Information

Contact Adams for Zoom information 

Wednesday, April 14 at 3:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.

Virtual Event

Event Type

Defenses

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