Transcatheter aortic valve implantation versus surgical aortic valve replacement in severe aortic stenosis patients at low surgical mortality risk: a cost-effectiveness analysis in Belgium

C. Dubois(KU Leuven), Tom Adriaenssens(KU Leuven), Lieven Annemans(Ghent University), Johan Bosmans(University of Antwerp), Britt Callebaut, Pascal Candolfi(Edwards Lifesciences (Switzerland)), Kristoff Cornelis(AZ Maria Middelares), Alexis Delbaere(Edwards Lifesciences (Switzerland)), Michelle Green(Leeds and York Partnership NHS Foundation Trust), Joëlle Kefer(Cliniques Universitaires Saint-Luc), Patrizio Lancellotti(University of Liège), Michaël Rosseel(Onze Lieve Vrouwziekenhuis Hospital), Judith Shore(Leeds and York Partnership NHS Foundation Trust), Jan Van der Heyden(AZ Sint-Jan), Sebastian Vermeersch, Eric Wyffels(Onze Lieve Vrouwziekenhuis Hospital)
Acta cardiologica. Supplementum
November 21, 2023
Cited by 21Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) with the SAPIEN 3 device has recently shown significant clinical benefits, compared to surgical aortic valve replacement (SAVR), in patients at low risk for surgical mortality (PARTNER 3 trial, NCT02675114). Currently in Belgium, TAVI use is restricted to high-risk or inoperable patients with severe symptomatic aortic stenosis (sSAS). This cost-utility analysis aimed to assess whether TAVI with SAPIEN 3 could lead to potential cost-savings compared with SAVR, in the low-risk sSAS population in Belgium. METHODS: A previously published, two-stage, Markov-based cost-utility model was used. Clinical outcomes were captured using data from PARTNER 3 and the model was adapted for the Belgian context using cost data from the perspective of the Belgian National Healthcare System, indexed to 2022. A lifetime horizon was chosen. The model outputs included changes in direct healthcare costs, survival and health-related quality of life using TAVI versus SAVR. RESULTS: TAVI with SAPIEN 3 provides meaningful clinical and cost benefits over SAVR, in terms of an increase in quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) of 0.94 and cost-saving of €3 013 per patient. While initial procedure costs were higher for TAVI compared with SAVR, costs related to rehabilitation, disabling stroke, treated atrial fibrillation, and rehospitalization were lower. The cost-effectiveness of TAVI over SAVR remained robust in sensitivity analyses. CONCLUSION: TAVI with SAPIEN 3 may offer a meaningful alternative intervention to SAVR in Belgian low-risk patients with sSAS, showing both clinical benefits and cost savings associated with post-procedure patient management.


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