Woodroffe R, Yao G L, Meads C, Bayliss S, Ready A, Raftery J, Taylor R S
Department of Public Health and Epidemiology, University of Birmingham, UK.
Health Technol Assess. 2005 May;9(21):1-179, iii-iv. doi: 10.3310/hta9210.
To examine the clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of the newer immunosuppressive drugs for renal transplantation: basiliximab, daclizumab, tacrolimus, mycophenolate (mofetil and sodium) and sirolimus.
Electronic databases. Industry submissions. Current Clinical Trials register. Cochrane Collaboration Renal Disease Group.
The review followed the InterTASC standards. Each of the five company submissions to the National Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE) contained cost-effectiveness models, which were evaluated by using a critique covering (1) model checking, (2) a detailed model description and (3) model rerunning.
For induction therapy, three randomised controlled trials (RCTs) found that daclizumab significantly reduced the incidence of biopsy-confirmed acute rejection and patient survival at 6 months/1 year compared with placebo, but not compared with the monoclonal antibody OKT3. There was no significant gain in patient survival or graft loss at 3 years. The incidence of side-effects with daclizumab reduced compared to OKT3. Eight RCTs found that basiliximab significantly improved 6-month/1-year biopsy-confirmed acute rejection compared to placebo, but not compared to either ATG or OKT3. There was no significant gain in either 1-year patient survival or graft loss. The incidence of side-effects with basiliximab was not significantly different compared to OKT3/ATG. For initial/maintenance therapy, 13 RCTs found that tacrolimus reduced the 6-month/1-year incidence of biopsy-proven acute rejection compared to ciclosporin. There was no significant improvement in either 1-year or long-term (up to 5 years) graft loss or patient survival. The acute rejection benefit of tacrolimus over ciclosporin appeared to be equivalent for Sandimmun and Neoral. There were important differences in the side-effect profile of tacrolimus and ciclosporin. Seven RCTs found that mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) reduced the incidence of acute rejection. There was no significant difference in patient survival or graft loss at 1-year or 3-year follow-up. There appeared to be differences in the side-effect profiles of MMF and azathioprine (AZA). No RCTs comparing MMF with AZA were identified. One RCT compared mycophenolate sodium (MPS) to MMF and reported no difference between the two drugs in 1-year acute rejection rate, graft survival, patient survival or side-effect profile. Two RCTs suggest that addition of sirolimus to a ciclosporin-based initial/maintenance therapy reduces 1-year acute rejections in comparison to a ciclosporin (Neoral) dual therapy alone and substituting azathioprine with sirolimus in initial/maintenance therapy reduces the incidence of acute rejection. Graft and patient survival were not significantly different with either sirolimus regimen. Adding sirolimus increases the incidence of side-effects. The side-effect profiles of azathioprine and sirolimus appear to be different. For the treatment of acute rejection, three RCTs suggested that both tacrolimus and MMF reduce the incidence of subsequent acute rejection and the need for additional drug therapy. Only one RCT and one subgroup analysis in children (<18 years) were identified comparing ciclosporin to tacrolimus and sirolimus, respectively.
The newer immunosuppressant drugs (basiliximab, daclizumab, tacrolimus and MMF) consistently reduced the incidence of short-term (1-year) acute rejection compared with conventional immunosuppressive therapy. The independent use of basiliximab, daclizumab, tacrolimus and MMF was associated with a similar absolute reduction in 1-year acute rejection rate (approximately 15%). However, the effects of these drugs did not appear to be additive (e.g. benefit of tacrolimus with adjuvant MMF was 5% reduction in acute rejection rate compared with 15% reduction with adjuvant AZA). Thus, the addition of one of these drugs to a baseline immunosuppressant regimen was likely to affect adversely the incremental cost-effectiveness of the addition of another. The trials did not assess how the improvement in short-term outcomes (e.g. acute rejection rate or measures of graft function), together with the side-effect profile associated with each drug, translated into changes in patient-related quality of life. Moreover, given the relatively short duration of trials, the impact of the newer immunosuppressants on long-term graft loss and patient survival remains uncertain. The absence of both long-term outcome and quality of life from trial data makes assessment of the clinical and cost-effectiveness on the newer immunosuppressants contingent on modelling based on extrapolations from short-term trial outcomes. The choice of the most appropriate short-term outcome (e.g. acute rejection rate or measures of graft function) for such modelling remains a matter of clinical and scientific debate. The decision to use acute rejection in the meta-model in this report was based on the findings of a systematic review of the literature of predictors of long-term graft outcome. Only a very small proportion of the RCTs identified in this review assessed patient-focused outcomes such as quality of life. Since immunosuppressive drugs have both clinical benefits and specific side-effects, the balance of these harms and benefits could best be quantified through future trials using quality of life measures. The design of future trials should be considered with a view to the impact of drugs on particular renal transplant groups, particularly higher risk individuals and children. Finally, there is a need for improved reporting of methodological details of future trials, such as the method of randomisation and allocation concealment. A number of issues exist around registry data, for example the use of multiple drug regimens and the need to assess the long-term outcomes. An option is the use of observational registry data including, if possible, prospective data on all consecutive UK renal transplant patients. Data capture for each patient should include immunosuppressant regimens, clinical and patient-related outcomes and patient demographics.
研究新型免疫抑制药物(巴利昔单抗、达利珠单抗、他克莫司、霉酚酸酯(吗替麦考酚酯和麦考酚钠)及西罗莫司)用于肾移植的临床疗效和成本效益。
电子数据库、制药企业提交资料、Current Clinical Trials注册库、Cochrane协作网肾病组。
本综述遵循InterTASC标准。制药企业向英国国家卫生与临床优化研究所(NICE)提交的五份资料中均包含成本效益模型,通过涵盖以下内容的评估进行评价:(1)模型检查;(2)详细的模型描述;(3)模型重新运行。
对于诱导治疗,三项随机对照试验(RCT)发现,与安慰剂相比,达利珠单抗显著降低了活检证实的急性排斥反应发生率及6个月/1年时的患者生存率,但与单克隆抗体OKT3相比则无显著差异。3年时患者生存率或移植物丢失率无显著改善。与OKT3相比,达利珠单抗的副作用发生率有所降低。八项RCT发现,与安慰剂相比,巴利昔单抗显著改善了6个月/1年时活检证实的急性排斥反应,但与抗胸腺细胞球蛋白(ATG)或OKT3相比则无显著差异。1年时患者生存率或移植物丢失率均无显著改善。与OKT3/ATG相比,巴利昔单抗的副作用发生率无显著差异。对于初始/维持治疗,13项RCT发现,与环孢素相比,他克莫司降低了6个月/1年时活检证实的急性排斥反应发生率。1年或长期(长达5年)的移植物丢失率或患者生存率均无显著改善。他克莫司相对于环孢素在预防急性排斥反应方面的益处,对于山地明和新山地明而言似乎相当。他克莫司和环孢素的副作用谱存在重要差异。七项RCT发现,吗替麦考酚酯(MMF)降低了急性排斥反应的发生率。1年或3年随访时患者生存率或移植物丢失率无显著差异。MMF和硫唑嘌呤(AZA)的副作用谱似乎存在差异。未找到比较MMF与AZA的RCT。一项RCT将麦考酚钠(MPS)与MMF进行比较,结果表明两种药物在1年急性排斥反应发生率、移植物存活率、患者生存率或副作用谱方面无差异。两项RCT表明,在基于环孢素的初始/维持治疗中加用西罗莫司,与单独使用环孢素(新山地明)双联疗法相比,可降低1年急性排斥反应发生率;在初始/维持治疗中用西罗莫司替代硫唑嘌呤可降低急性排斥反应发生率。两种西罗莫司治疗方案的移植物和患者生存率无显著差异。加用西罗莫司会增加副作用发生率。硫唑嘌呤和西罗莫司的副作用谱似乎不同。对于急性排斥反应的治疗,三项RCT表明,他克莫司和MMF均降低了后续急性排斥反应的发生率及额外药物治疗的需求。仅找到一项RCT及一项儿童(<18岁)亚组分析,分别比较了环孢素与他克莫司及西罗莫司。
与传统免疫抑制治疗相比,新型免疫抑制药物(巴利昔单抗、达利珠单抗、他克莫司和MMF)持续降低了短期(1年)急性排斥反应的发生率。单独使用巴利昔单抗、达利珠单抗、他克莫司和MMF,1年急性排斥反应率的绝对降低幅度相似(约15%)。然而,这些药物的效果似乎并非相加的(例如,他克莫司联合MMF的急性排斥反应率降低5%,而联合AZA则降低15%)。因此,在基线免疫抑制方案中加用其中一种药物可能会对加用另一种药物的增量成本效益产生不利影响。这些试验未评估短期结局(如急性排斥反应率或移植物功能指标)的改善以及每种药物相关的副作用谱如何转化为患者相关生活质量的变化。此外,鉴于试验持续时间相对较短,新型免疫抑制剂对长期移植物丢失和患者生存率的影响仍不确定。试验数据缺乏长期结局和生活质量信息,这使得对新型免疫抑制剂临床和成本效益的评估取决于基于短期试验结局推断的模型。选择最合适的短期结局(如急性排斥反应率或移植物功能指标)进行此类建模仍是临床和科学争论的问题。本报告中在元模型中使用急性排斥反应这一指标是基于对长期移植物结局预测因素文献的系统综述结果。本综述中确定的RCT中只有极小一部分评估了以患者为中心的结局,如生活质量。由于免疫抑制药物既有临床益处又有特定副作用,未来使用生活质量指标进行的试验能够最好地量化这些危害和益处之间的平衡。未来试验的设计应考虑药物对特定肾移植群体的影响,特别是高风险个体和儿童。最后,需要改进未来试验方法学细节的报告,如随机化方法和分配隐藏。围绕注册数据存在一些问题,例如多种药物方案的使用以及评估长期结局的必要性。一种选择是使用观察性注册数据,如有可能,包括所有英国连续肾移植患者的前瞻性数据。每个患者的数据采集应包括免疫抑制方案、临床和患者相关结局以及患者人口统计学信息。