Candesartan was cost-saving or had a maximum cost per life-year gained of 3881 euros in patients with heart failure and LVEF ≤0.40, largely by reducing hospital admissions.
RCT
randomized
Yes
Is candesartan cost-effective compared to placebo in patients with chronic heart failure?
Candesartan is a cost-effective or cost-saving treatment for patients with heart failure and reduced ejection fraction.
AIMS: More treatments are needed to improve clinical outcomes in chronic heart failure (HF). It is, however, important that treatments for a condition as common as HF are affordable. We have carried out a prospective economic analysis of the Candesartan in Heart failure: Assessment of Reduction in Mortality and morbidity (CHARM) programme. METHODS AND RESULTS: Patients with NYHA class II-IV HF and LVEF 0.40 were randomized in CHARM-Preserved. Each trial compared the effect of candesartan to placebo on the primary outcome of cardiovascular death or HF hospitalization. Detailed information was prospectively collected on hospital admissions, procedures/operations and drugs. A cost-consequence analysis was performed for France, Germany and the UK for CHARM-Overall and a cost-effectiveness analysis for the low LVEF trials. The cost of candesartan was substantially offset by a reduction in hospital admissions, especially for HF. In the cost-consequence analysis, candesartan was cost-saving in most scenarios for CHARM-Alternative and Added but the marginal annual net cost per patient was upto 372 euros per year in CHARM-Preserved, in which candesartan did not reduce the primary outcome significantly. In the cost-effectiveness analysis of patients with a LVEF < or = 0.40, candesartan was cost-saving in some scenarios and in the others the maximum cost per life year gained was 3881 euros. CONCLUSION: Candesartan improves functional class, reduces the risk of hospital admission, and increases survival in patients with a HF and a LVEF < or =0.40 at an acceptable cost.
John J.V. McMurray (Mon,) conducted a rct in chronic heart failure (HF). candesartan vs. placebo was evaluated on cardiovascular death or HF hospitalization. Candesartan was cost-saving or had a maximum cost per life-year gained of 3881 euros in patients with heart failure and LVEF ≤0.40, largely by reducing hospital admissions.
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