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Cost-Effectiveness of Apixaban, Dabigatran, Rivaroxaban, and Warfarin for Stroke Prevention in Atrial Fibrillation

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TLDR
In patients with nonvalvular atrial fibrillation and an increased risk of stroke prophylaxis, apixaban 5 mg, dabigatran 150 mg, and rivaroxaban 20 mg were all cost-effective alternatives to warfarin.
Abstract
Background and Purpose—To estimate the cost-effectiveness of stroke prevention in patients with nonvalvular atrial fibrillation by using novel oral anticoagulants apixaban 5 mg, dabigatran 150 mg, and rivaroxaban 20 mg compared with warfarin. Methods—A Markov decision-analysis model was constructed using data from clinical trials to evaluate lifetime costs and quality-adjusted life-years of novel oral anticoagulants compared with warfarin. The modeled population was a hypothetical cohort of 70-year-old patients with nonvalvular atrial fibrillation, increased risk for stroke (CHADS2 ≥1), renal creatinine clearance ≥50 mL/min, and no previous contraindications to anticoagulation. The willingness-to-pay threshold was $50 000/quality-adjusted life-years gained. Results—In the base case, warfarin had the lowest cost of $77 813 (SD, $2223), followed by rivaroxaban 20 mg ($78 738±$1852), dabigatran 150 mg ($82 719±$1959), and apixaban 5 mg ($85 326±$1512). Apixaban 5 mg had the highest quality-adjusted life-year...

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The gap between economic evaluations and clinical practice: a systematic review of economic evaluations on dabigatran for atrial fibrillation

TL;DR: MBEEs on dabigatran leave out several relevant factors, limiting their usefulness to decision makers, and are strongly urged to improve the relevance of their MBEEs by including context-independent relevance factors, and modeling context-dependent factors befitting the decision context concerned.
Journal ArticleDOI

Novel Oral Anticoagulants: A New Era in Anti-Thrombotic Therapy

TL;DR: Several novel oral anticoagulants (NOACs) have emerged and are now available as a suitable alternative for stroke prevention, venous thromboembolism prevention and treatment and to reduce vascular events in acute coronary syndrome.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cnidoscolus Aconitifolius (Mill.) I.M. Johnst.: A Food Proposal Against Thromboembolic Diseases

TL;DR: The most common underlying pathologies of cardiovascular disorders are thromboembolic diseases as mentioned in this paper, which are the leading cause of death worldwide. But, the antithrombotic therapy prevents...

Cost effectiveness of warfarin in anticoagulant clinic after introduction of dabigatran for stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation patients in the united states

TL;DR: This study showed that substituting dabigatran for warfarin in this population was not within acceptable willingness to pay values for new therapy, and substitution without monitoring resulted in an additional $82,793 per QALY saved.
Journal ArticleDOI

The quest to prevent stroke in atrial fibrillation: Fighting the fluttering heart in Singapore.

TL;DR: There has been resurgence in the attention placed on pharmacotherapy in atrial fibrillation recently as specialists in international conferences discuss the utility of novel anticoagulants with caution with caution owing to limited knowledge of the side effect profile in this nascent stage.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Rivaroxaban versus Warfarin in Nonvalvular Atrial Fibrillation

TL;DR: In patients with atrial fibrillation, rivaroxaban was noninferior to warfarin for the prevention of stroke or systemic embolism and there was no significant between-group difference in the risk of major bleeding, although intracranial and fatal bleeding occurred less frequently in the rivroxaban group.
Journal ArticleDOI

Atrial fibrillation as an independent risk factor for stroke: the Framingham Study.

TL;DR: The data suggest that the elderly are particularly vulnerable to stroke when atrial fibrillation is present, and the effects of hypertension, coronary heart disease, and cardiac failure on the risk of stroke became progressively weaker with increasing age.
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