Brazzelli Miriam, Cruickshank Moira, Tassie Emma, McNamee Paul, Robertson Clare, Elders Andrew, Fraser Cynthia, Hernandez Rodolfo, Lawrie David, Ramsay Craig
Health Services Research Unit, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, UK.
Health Economics Research Unit, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, UK.
Health Technol Assess. 2015 Oct;19(90):1-202. doi: 10.3310/hta19900.
Dupuytren's disease is a slowly progressive condition of the hand, characterised by the formation of nodules in the palm that gradually develop into fibrotic cords. Contracture of the cords produces deformities of the fingers. Surgery is recommended for moderate and severe contractures, but complications and/or recurrences are frequent. Collagenase clostridium histolyticum (CCH) has been developed as a minimally invasive alternative to surgery for some patients.
To assess the clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of collagenase as an alternative to surgery for adults with Dupuytren's contracture with a palpable cord.
We searched all major electronic databases from 1990 to February 2014.
Randomised controlled trials (RCTs), non-randomised comparative studies and observational studies involving collagenase and/or surgical interventions were considered. Two reviewers independently extracted data and assessed risk of bias of included studies. A de novo Markov model was developed to assess cost-effectiveness of collagenase, percutaneous needle fasciotomy (PNF) and limited fasciectomy (LF). Results were reported as incremental cost per quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) gained. Deterministic and probabilistic sensitivity analyses were undertaken to investigate model and parameter uncertainty.
Five RCTs comparing collagenase with placebo (493 participants), three RCTs comparing surgical techniques (334 participants), two non-randomised studies comparing collagenase and surgery (105 participants), five non-randomised comparative studies assessing various surgical procedures (3571 participants) and 15 collagenase case series (3154 participants) were included. Meta-analyses of RCTs assessing CCH versus placebo were performed. Joints randomised to collagenase were more likely to achieve clinical success. Collagenase-treated participants experienced significant reduction in contracture and an increased range of motion compared with placebo-treated participants. Participants treated with collagenase also experienced significantly more adverse events, most of which were mild or moderate. Four serious adverse events were observed in the collagenase group: two tendon ruptures, one pulley rupture and one complex regional pain syndrome. Two tendon ruptures were also reported in two collagenase case series. Non-randomised studies comparing collagenase with surgery produced variable results and were at high risk of bias. Serious adverse events across surgery studies were low. Recurrence rates ranged from 0% (at 90 days) to 100% (at 8 years) for collagenase and from 0% (at 2.7 years for fasciectomy) to 85% (at 5 years for PNF) for surgery. The results of the de novo economic analysis show that PNF was the cheapest treatment option, whereas LF generated the greatest QALY gains. Collagenase was more costly and generated fewer QALYs compared with LF. LF was £1199 more costly and generated an additional 0.11 QALYs in comparison with PNF. The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio was £10,871 per QALY gained. Two subgroup analyses were conducted for a population of patients with moderate and severe disease and up to two joints affected. In both subgroup analyses, collagenase remained dominated.
The main limitation of the review was the lack of head-to-head RCTs comparing collagenase with surgery and the limited evidence base for estimating the effects of specific surgical procedures (fasciectomy and PNF). Substantial differences across studies further limited the comparability of available evidence. The economic model was derived from a naive indirect comparison and was hindered by a lack of suitable data. In addition, there was considerable uncertainty about the appropriateness of many assumptions and parameters used in the model.
Collagenase was significantly better than placebo. There was no evidence that collagenase was clinically better or worse than surgical treatments. LF was the most cost-effective choice to treat moderate to severe contractures, whereas collagenase was not. However, the results of the cost-utility analysis are based on a naive indirect comparison of clinical effectiveness, and a RCT is required to confirm or refute these findings.
This study is registered as PROSPERO CRD42013006248.
The National Institute for Health Research Health Technology Assessment programme.
杜普伊特伦挛缩病是一种手部的缓慢进展性疾病,其特征是手掌中形成结节,这些结节逐渐发展为纤维化条索。条索的挛缩会导致手指畸形。对于中度和重度挛缩,建议进行手术治疗,但并发症和/或复发很常见。溶组织梭状芽孢杆菌胶原酶(CCH)已被开发出来,作为一些患者手术的微创替代方法。
评估胶原酶作为有可触及条索的杜普伊特伦挛缩成年患者手术替代方法的临床有效性和成本效益。
我们检索了1990年至2014年2月期间所有主要的电子数据库。
纳入涉及胶原酶和/或手术干预的随机对照试验(RCT)、非随机对照研究和观察性研究。两名综述员独立提取数据并评估纳入研究的偏倚风险。开发了一个全新的马尔可夫模型来评估胶原酶、经皮针状筋膜切开术(PNF)和有限筋膜切除术(LF)的成本效益。结果以每获得一个质量调整生命年(QALY)的增量成本报告。进行了确定性和概率性敏感性分析,以研究模型和参数的不确定性。
纳入了五项比较胶原酶与安慰剂的RCT(493名参与者)、三项比较手术技术的RCT(334名参与者)、两项比较胶原酶与手术的非随机研究(105名参与者)、五项评估各种手术程序的非随机对照研究(3571名参与者)以及15个胶原酶病例系列(3154名参与者)。对评估CCH与安慰剂的RCT进行了荟萃分析。随机分配到胶原酶组的关节更有可能取得临床成功。与安慰剂治疗的参与者相比,胶原酶治疗的参与者挛缩明显减轻,活动范围增加。接受胶原酶治疗的参与者也经历了明显更多的不良事件,其中大多数为轻度或中度。在胶原酶组中观察到4例严重不良事件:2例肌腱断裂、1例滑车破裂和1例复杂性区域疼痛综合征。在两个胶原酶病例系列中也报告了2例肌腱断裂。比较胶原酶与手术的非随机研究结果不一,且存在较高的偏倚风险。手术研究中的严重不良事件发生率较低。胶原酶的复发率在0%(90天时)至100%(8年时)之间,手术的复发率在0%(筋膜切除术2.7年时)至85%(PNF 5年时)之间。全新经济分析的结果表明,PNF是最便宜的治疗选择,而LF产生的QALY增益最大。与LF相比,胶原酶成本更高且产生的QALY更少。与PNF相比,LF成本高1199英镑,额外产生0.11个QALY。每获得一个QALY的增量成本效益比为10871英镑。对中度和重度疾病且累及多达两个关节的患者群体进行了两项亚组分析。在两项亚组分析中,胶原酶均处于劣势。
本综述的主要局限性在于缺乏比较胶原酶与手术的直接头对头RCT,以及估计特定手术程序(筋膜切除术和PNF)效果的证据基础有限。各研究之间的实质性差异进一步限制了现有证据的可比性。经济模型来自简单的间接比较,且因缺乏合适数据而受到阻碍。此外,模型中使用的许多假设和参数的适当性存在相当大的不确定性。
胶原酶明显优于安慰剂。没有证据表明胶原酶在临床上优于或劣于手术治疗。LF是治疗中度至重度挛缩最具成本效益的选择,但胶原酶不是。然而,成本效用分析的结果基于对临床有效性的简单间接比较,需要进行RCT来证实或反驳这些发现。
本研究注册为PROSPERO CRD42013006248。