Background:
Deferoxamine (DFO) or Deferiprone (DFP) or Deferasirox (DFX)
monotherapy and DFO and DFP combination therapy (DFO+DFP) were four
commonly implemented now chelation regimens for the iron overloaded of
β-thalassemia major. This systematic review aims to determine the
cost-effectiveness of four chelation regimens and provide evidence for
the rational use of chelation regimens for β-thalassemia major therapy
in the clinic.
Methods: A
systematic literature search in MEDLINE, EMBASE, the Cochrane Library,
China Biology Medicine, China National Knowledge Infrastructure, VIP
Data, and WanFang Data was conducted in April 2018. In addition, a
manual search was performed. Two researchers, working independently,
selected the papers, extracted the data, and assessed the
methodological quality of the included documents. Each included paper
was evaluated using a checklist developed by Drummond et al.
Results:
The number of records was initially 968, and eight papers met the final
eligibility criteria. All the included eight papers were cost-utility
analyses, and their methodological quality was fair. In these eight
papers, nineteen studies were present. Nine studies of DFX versus DFO
had contradictory results. Out of the nineteen studies, three studies
of DFX versus DFP established that using DFP was cost-effective. Three
studies of DFP versus DFO proved that using DFP was cost-effective. One
survey of DFO+DFP versus DFO found that using DFO was cost-effective.
One study of DFO+DFP versus DFP found that using DFP was
cost-effective. Moreover, there were two studies of DFO+DFP versus DFX,
but we cannot be sure which one of two chelation regimens was
cost-effective.
Conclusion:
In brief, DFP is cost-effective, followed by DFO or DFX, when an iron
chelator is to be used alone for β-thalassemia iron overload treatment.
All studies that compared DFO+DFP with DFO (or DFP) monotherapy
established that the DFO+DFP was not cost-effective. Existing studies
about DFO+DFP versus DFX could not prove which one of two chelation
regimens was cost-effective. However, due to the low number of DFO+DFP
versus DFO (or DFP or DFX) monotherapy studies, more extensive,
high-quality research is required for further analysis and confirmation
of our findings. Moreover, the cost-effectiveness is not an absolute
issue when in different countries (regions) the results are opposite
for other countries (regions). As a result, the local/national context
had a substantial influence on the results of the pharmacoeconomic
evaluation.