Inequalities in pharmacologic treatment of spasticity in Sweden – health economic consequences of closing the treatment gap

Abstract Background The Swedish Healthcare Act states that patients should have equal access to healthcare. This study addresses at how this translates to pharmacological treatment of adult spasticity, including injections with botulinum toxin A (BoNT-A) and pumps for intrathecal baclofen (ITB). To...

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Main Authors: Annabelle Forsmark, Linda Rosengren, Per Ertzgaard
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-02-01
Series:Health Economics Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s13561-020-0261-7
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spelling doaj-4fffe13f476a44c2ba86134a6e9f62542021-02-07T12:15:43ZengBMCHealth Economics Review2191-19912020-02-011011810.1186/s13561-020-0261-7Inequalities in pharmacologic treatment of spasticity in Sweden – health economic consequences of closing the treatment gapAnnabelle Forsmark0Linda Rosengren1Per Ertzgaard2PharmaLexIpsenDepartment of Rehabilitation Medicine and Department of Medicine and Health Sciences, Linköping UniversityAbstract Background The Swedish Healthcare Act states that patients should have equal access to healthcare. This study addresses at how this translates to pharmacological treatment of adult spasticity, including injections with botulinum toxin A (BoNT-A) and pumps for intrathecal baclofen (ITB). To address potential economic incentives for treatment differences, the results are also set into a health economic perspective. Thus, the current study provides a detailed and comprehensive overview for informed decision- and policymaking. Methods Botulinum toxin use was retrieved from sales data. Clinical practice regarding mean BoNT-A treatment dose and proportion used for spasticity indication were validated in five county councils, while the number of ITB pumps were mapped for all county councils. Published costs and quality of life data was used for estimating required responder rates for cost-balance or cost-effectiveness. Results The proportion of patients treated with BoNT-A varied between 5.8% and 13.6% across healthcare regions, with a mean of 9.2% on a national level. The reported number of ITB pumps per 100,000 inhabitants varied between 3.6 and 14.1 across healthcare regions, with a national mean of 6/100,000. The estimated incremental cost for reaching treatment equity was EUR 1,976,773 per year for BoNT-A and EUR 3,326,692 for ITB pumps. Based on expected cost-savings, responder rates ranging between 4% and 15% cancelled out the incremental cost for BoNT-A. Assuming no cost-savings, responder rates of 14% or 36% was required for cost-effectiveness. Conclusions There is a marked variation in pharmacologic treatment of adult spasticity in Sweden. Overall, the results indicate an underuse of treatment and need for harmonisation of clinical practice. Furthermore, the incremental cost for reaching treatment equity is likely to be offset by spasticity-associated cost-savings.https://doi.org/10.1186/s13561-020-0261-7Botulinum toxinsBaclofenMuscle spasticityTreatmentAccess to health careHealth care costs
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Annabelle Forsmark
Linda Rosengren
Per Ertzgaard
spellingShingle Annabelle Forsmark
Linda Rosengren
Per Ertzgaard
Inequalities in pharmacologic treatment of spasticity in Sweden – health economic consequences of closing the treatment gap
Health Economics Review
Botulinum toxins
Baclofen
Muscle spasticity
Treatment
Access to health care
Health care costs
author_facet Annabelle Forsmark
Linda Rosengren
Per Ertzgaard
author_sort Annabelle Forsmark
title Inequalities in pharmacologic treatment of spasticity in Sweden – health economic consequences of closing the treatment gap
title_short Inequalities in pharmacologic treatment of spasticity in Sweden – health economic consequences of closing the treatment gap
title_full Inequalities in pharmacologic treatment of spasticity in Sweden – health economic consequences of closing the treatment gap
title_fullStr Inequalities in pharmacologic treatment of spasticity in Sweden – health economic consequences of closing the treatment gap
title_full_unstemmed Inequalities in pharmacologic treatment of spasticity in Sweden – health economic consequences of closing the treatment gap
title_sort inequalities in pharmacologic treatment of spasticity in sweden – health economic consequences of closing the treatment gap
publisher BMC
series Health Economics Review
issn 2191-1991
publishDate 2020-02-01
description Abstract Background The Swedish Healthcare Act states that patients should have equal access to healthcare. This study addresses at how this translates to pharmacological treatment of adult spasticity, including injections with botulinum toxin A (BoNT-A) and pumps for intrathecal baclofen (ITB). To address potential economic incentives for treatment differences, the results are also set into a health economic perspective. Thus, the current study provides a detailed and comprehensive overview for informed decision- and policymaking. Methods Botulinum toxin use was retrieved from sales data. Clinical practice regarding mean BoNT-A treatment dose and proportion used for spasticity indication were validated in five county councils, while the number of ITB pumps were mapped for all county councils. Published costs and quality of life data was used for estimating required responder rates for cost-balance or cost-effectiveness. Results The proportion of patients treated with BoNT-A varied between 5.8% and 13.6% across healthcare regions, with a mean of 9.2% on a national level. The reported number of ITB pumps per 100,000 inhabitants varied between 3.6 and 14.1 across healthcare regions, with a national mean of 6/100,000. The estimated incremental cost for reaching treatment equity was EUR 1,976,773 per year for BoNT-A and EUR 3,326,692 for ITB pumps. Based on expected cost-savings, responder rates ranging between 4% and 15% cancelled out the incremental cost for BoNT-A. Assuming no cost-savings, responder rates of 14% or 36% was required for cost-effectiveness. Conclusions There is a marked variation in pharmacologic treatment of adult spasticity in Sweden. Overall, the results indicate an underuse of treatment and need for harmonisation of clinical practice. Furthermore, the incremental cost for reaching treatment equity is likely to be offset by spasticity-associated cost-savings.
topic Botulinum toxins
Baclofen
Muscle spasticity
Treatment
Access to health care
Health care costs
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s13561-020-0261-7
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