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Cost-Effectiveness of Dopamine Agonists and Monoamine Oxidase B Inhibitors in Early Parkinson's Disease

McIntosh, Emma; Kent, Seamus; Gray, Alastair; Clarke, Carl E.; Williams, Adrian; Jenkinson, Crispin; Ives, Natalie; Patel, Smitaa; Rick, Caroline; Wheatley, Keith; Gray, Richard; PD MED Collaborative Group

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Authors

Emma McIntosh

Seamus Kent

Alastair Gray

Carl E. Clarke

Adrian Williams

Crispin Jenkinson

Natalie Ives

Smitaa Patel

Keith Wheatley

Richard Gray

PD MED Collaborative Group



Abstract

Background: The PD MED study reported small but persistent benefits in patient-rated mobility scores and quality of life from initiating therapy with levodopa compared with levodopa-sparing therapies in early Parkinson's disease (PD). Objectives: The objective was to estimate the cost-effectiveness of levodopa-sparing therapy (dopamine agonists or monoamine oxidase type B inhibitors compared with levodopa alone. Methods: PD MED is a pragmatic, open-label randomized, controlled trial in which patients newly diagnosed with PD were randomly assigned between levodopa-sparing therapy (dopamine agonists or monoamine oxidase type B inhibitors) and levodopa alone. Mean quality-adjusted life-years and costs were calculated for each participant. Differences in mean quality-adjusted life-years and costs between levodopa and levodopa-sparing therapies and between dopamine agonists and monoamine oxidase type B inhibitors were estimated using linear regression. Results: Over a mean observation period of 4 years, levodopa was associated with significantly higher quality-adjusted life-years (difference, 0.18; 95% CI, 0.05–0.30; P < 0.01) and lower mean costs (£3390; £2671–£4109; P < 0.01) than levodopa-sparing therapies, the difference in costs driven by the higher costs of levodopa-sparing therapies. There were no significant differences in the costs of inpatient, social care, and institutional care between arms. There was no significant difference in quality-adjusted life-years between those allocated dopamine agonists and monoamine oxidase type B inhibitors (0.02; −0.17 to 0.13 in favor of dopamine agonists; P = 0.81); however costs were significantly lower for those allocated monoamine oxidase type B inhibitors (£2321; £1628–£3015; P < 0.01) because of the higher costs of dopamine agonists. There were no significant differences between arms for other costs. Conclusions: Initial treatment with levodopa is highly cost-effective compared with levodopa-sparing therapies. Monoamine oxidase type B inhibitors, as initial levodopa-sparing therapy was more cost-effective, with similar quality-adjusted life-years but lower costs than dopamine agonists. © 2021 The Authors. Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.

Citation

McIntosh, E., Kent, S., Gray, A., Clarke, C. E., Williams, A., Jenkinson, C., Ives, N., Patel, S., Rick, C., Wheatley, K., Gray, R., & PD MED Collaborative Group. (2021). Cost-Effectiveness of Dopamine Agonists and Monoamine Oxidase B Inhibitors in Early Parkinson's Disease. Movement Disorders, 36(9), 2136-2143. https://doi.org/10.1002/mds.28623

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Apr 5, 2021
Online Publication Date May 7, 2021
Publication Date Sep 1, 2021
Deposit Date Aug 10, 2021
Publicly Available Date Aug 10, 2021
Journal Movement Disorders
Print ISSN 0885-3185
Electronic ISSN 1531-8257
Publisher Wiley
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 36
Issue 9
Pages 2136-2143
DOI https://doi.org/10.1002/mds.28623
Keywords Clinical Neurology; Neurology
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/6010929
Publisher URL https://movementdisorders.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/mds.28623
Additional Information Authors on behalf of the PD MED Collaborative Group.

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