Sequential interleukin-17 inhibitors for moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis who have an IL-17 inhibitors failure in a resource limited country: An economic evaluation
Piyameth Dilokthornsakul, Ratree Sawangjit, Nopadon Noppakun, Natta Rajatanavin, Bensachee Pattamadilok, Leena Chularojanamontri, Unchalee Permsuwan, Robert Jeenchen Chen, Robert Jeenchen Chen, Robert Jeenchen Chen

TL;DR
This study evaluates the cost-effectiveness of different treatment sequences for psoriasis in a resource-limited setting, finding that one sequence offers the best value.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel economic evaluation of sequential biologic treatments for psoriasis in resource-limited countries.
Findings
All three sequential biologic therapies gained quality-adjusted life years but were more costly than standard care.
Sequence 1 had the lowest incremental cost-effectiveness ratio compared to standard of care.
At current willingness-to-pay thresholds, no sequential IL-17 inhibitor was cost-effective compared to standard care.
Abstract
Biologics has been known to be effective for patients with psoriasis. However, optimal treatment pathways and their cost-effectiveness are limited in a resource-limited country. This study assessed the cost-effectiveness of different sequential biologics for moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis. A hybrid model from a societal perspective was used. Model inputs were derived from network meta-analysis, clinical trials, and published literature. Three different sequential biologic treatments were assessed; Sequence 1; 1st Interleukin-17 (IL-17) inhibitor (secukinumab) followed by 2nd IL-17 inhibitors (ixekizumab or brodalumab), then 3rd IL-23 inhibitor (guselkumab), Sequence 2; ixekizumab followed by secukinumab or brodalumab, then guselkumab, and Sequence 3; brodalumab followed by ixekizumab or secukinumab, then guselkumab. Methotrexate or ciclosporin was used as standard of care (SoC).…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPsoriasis: Treatment and Pathogenesis
