Cost-effectiveness of adrenaline for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest

  • Dale Gardiner
  • , Gavin D. Perkins
  • , PARAMEDIC2 Collaborators
  • , Felix Achana
  • , Stavros Petrou
  • , Jason Madan
  • , Kamran Khan
  • , Chen Jin
  • , Anower Hossain
  • , Ranjit Lall
  • , Anne-Marie Slowther
  • , Charles D. Deakin
  • , Tom Quinn
  • , Jerry P. Nolan
  • , Helen Pocock
  • , Nigel Rees
  • , Michael Smyth
  • , Simon Gates

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Abstract: Background: The 'Prehospital Assessment of the Role of Adrenaline: Measuring the Effectiveness of Drug Administration In Cardiac Arrest' (PARAMEDIC2) trial showed that adrenaline improves overall survival, but not neurological outcomes. We sought to determine the within-trial and lifetime health and social care costs and benefits associated with adrenaline, including secondary benefits from organ donation. Methods: We estimated the costs, benefits (quality-adjusted life years (QALYs)) and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) associated with adrenaline during the 6-month trial follow-up. Model-based analyses explored how results altered when the time horizon was extended beyond 6 months and the scope extended to include recipients of donated organs. Results: The within-trial (6 months) and lifetime horizon economic evaluations focussed on the trial population produced ICERs of £1,693,003 (€1,946,953) and £81,070 (€93,231) per QALY gained in 2017 prices, respectively, reflecting significantly higher mean costs and only marginally higher mean QALYs in the adrenaline group. The probability that adrenaline is cost-effective was less than 1% across a range of cost-effectiveness thresholds. Combined direct economic effects over the lifetimes of survivors and indirect economic effects in organ recipients produced an ICER of £16,086 (€18,499) per QALY gained for adrenaline with the probability that adrenaline is cost-effective increasing to 90% at a £30,000 (€34,500) per QALY cost-effectiveness threshold. Conclusions: Adrenaline was not cost-effective when only directly related costs and consequences are considered. However, incorporating the indirect economic effects associated with transplanted organs substantially alters cost-effectiveness, suggesting decision-makers should consider the complexity of direct and indirect economic impacts of adrenaline.
Original languageEnglish
Article number579
JournalCritical Care
Volume24
Early online date27 Sept 2020
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 27 Sept 2020
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Note: This work was supported by the National Institute for Health Research's Health Technology Assessment Programme [project number 12/127/126].

Keywords

  • Allied health professions and studies
  • cardiac arrest
  • cost-effectiveness of adrenaline
  • economics
  • organ donation
  • research

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