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Neurol Clin Pract ; 14(5): e200340, 2024 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39161748

RESUMEN

Background and Objectives: Disease-modifying treatments (DMTs) such as gene therapy are currently under investigation as a potential treatment for Huntington disease (HD). Our objective was to estimate the long-term natural history of HD progression and explore the potential efficacy impacts and value of a hypothetical DMT using a decision-analytic modeling framework. Methods: We developed a health state transition model that separately analyzed 40-year-old individuals with prefunctional decline (PFD, HD Integrated Staging System [HD-ISS] stage <3, total functional score [TFC] 13), active functional decline Shoulson and Fahn category 1 (SF1, HD-ISS stage 3, TFC 13-11), and SF2 (HD-ISS stage 3, TFC 10-7). Three-year outcomes from the TRACK-HD longitudinal study were linearly extrapolated to estimate the long-term health outcomes and costs of each population. For PFD individuals, we used the HD-ISS to predict the onset of functional decline. HD costs and quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) were estimated over a lifetime horizon by applying health state-specific costs and utilities derived from a related HD burden-of-illness study. We then estimated the long-term health impacts of hypothetical DMTs that slowed or delayed onset of functional decline. We conducted sensitivity analyses to assess model uncertainties. Results: The expected life years for 40-year-old PFD, SF1, and SF2 populations were 20.46 (95% credible range [CR]: 19.05-22.30), 13.93 (10.82-19.08), and 10.99 (8.28-22.07), respectively. The expected QALYs for PFD, SF1, and SF2 populations were 15.93 (14.91-17.44), 8.29 (6.36-11.79), and 5.79 (4.14-12.91), respectively. The lifetime costs of HD were $508,200 ($310,300 to $803,700) for the PFD population, $1.15 million ($684,500 to $1.89 million) for SF1 individuals, and $1.07 million ($571,700 to $2.26 million) for SF2 individuals. Although hypothetical DMTs led to cost savings in the PFD population by delaying the cost burdens of functional decline, they increased costs in SF1 and SF2 populations by prolonging time spent in expensive progressive HD states. Discussion: Our novel HD-modeling framework estimates HD progression over a lifetime and the associated costs and QALYs. Our approach can be used for future cost-effectiveness models as positive DMT clinical trial evidence becomes available.

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