Home > Economic evaluations of alcohol pharmacotherapy: systematic review of economic evaluations of pharmacotherapy for the treatment of alcohol use disorder.

Higginbotham, Benjamin and Perez, Joahna Kevin and Louie, Eva and Haber, Paul S and Lubman, Dan and Arunogiri, Shalini and Chatterton, Mary Lou and Morley, Kirsten C (2024) Economic evaluations of alcohol pharmacotherapy: systematic review of economic evaluations of pharmacotherapy for the treatment of alcohol use disorder. The Australian and New Zealand journal of psychiatry, 58, (2), pp. 117-133. https://doi.org/10.1177/00048674231201541.

External website: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/000486742...

OBJECTIVE: Alcohol use disorders confer a significant burden of disease and economic cost worldwide. However, the utilisation of pharmacotherapies to manage alcohol use disorder is poor. We aimed to conduct a systematic review of economic evaluation studies of alcohol use disorder pharmacotherapies.

METHODS: A search was conducted in Embase, Medline, CINAHL, PsychINFO and EconLit (August 2019, updated September 2022). Full economic evaluations using pharmacotherapy to treat alcohol use disorders were included. Included studies were stratified by medication and summarised descriptively. The Consensus on Health Economic Criteria list was used to assess the methodological quality.

RESULTS: A total of 1139 studies were retrieved, of which 15 met the inclusion criteria. All studies were conducted in high-income countries. Four studies analysed nalmefene, four studies assessed acamprosate, three for naltrexone and four for stand-alone and/or combinations of naltrexone and acamprosate. There were 21 interventions synthesised from 15 studies as some studies evaluated multiple interventions and comparators. More than half of the included studies (73%) reported pharmacotherapy as dominant (less costly and more effective than comparators). From healthcare payer perspectives, five studies found that pharmacotherapy added to psychosocial support was dominant or cost-effective, accruing additional benefits at a higher cost but under accepted willingness to pay thresholds. Three analyses from a societal perspective found pharmacotherapy added to psychosocial support was a dominant or cost-effective strategy. Quality scores ranged from 63% to 95%.

CONCLUSION: Pharmacotherapy added to psychosocial support was cost-effective from both healthcare and societal perspectives, emphasising an increased role for pharmacotherapy to reduce the burden of alcohol use disorders.


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