GLPwatch

Cost-effectiveness of the add-on exenatide to conventional treatment in patients with Parkinson's disease when considering the coexisting effects of diabetes mellitus.

PLoS One · 2022

Last updated 2026-05-28

Adding exenatide to standard treatment for Parkinson's disease patients costs about NT$104,744 more per person over 50 years but provides an average of 0.39 extra years of good-quality life. The cost per quality-adjusted life year gained is NT$268,333, which is considered very cost-effective compared to the gross domestic product per capita in Taiwan.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalPLoS One, 2022
Citations2
Relative citation ratio0.19
NIH percentile12
Molecules exenatide
Conditions studied Parkinsons, Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: This study aims to investigate the cost-effectiveness of the add-on exenatide to conventional pharmacotherapy in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) when considering the coexistence of diabetes mellitus (DM). METHODS: We used the Keelung and Community-based Integrated Screening databases to understand the medical utilisation in the Hoehn and Yahr stages of patients with PD. A Markov model with 1-year cycle length and 50-year time horizon was used to assess the cost-effectiveness of add-on exenatide to conventional pharmacotherapy compared to conventional pharmacotherapy alone. All costs were adjusted to the value of the new Taiwanese dollar (NT$) as of the year 2020. One-way sensitivity and probability analyses were performed to test the robustness of the results. RESULTS: From a societal perspective, the add-on exenatide brought an average of 0.39 quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) gained, and a cost increment of NT$104,744 per person in a 50-year horizon compared to conventional pharmacotherapy. The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) was NT$268,333 per QALY gained. As the ICER was less than the gross domestic product per capita (NT$839,558), the add-on exenatide was considered to be very cost-effective in the two models, according to the World Health Organization recommendation. Add-on exenatide had a 96.9% probability of being cost-effective in patients with PD, and a 100% probability of being cost-effective in patients with PD and DM. CONCLUSION: Add-on exenatide is cost-effective in PD combined with DM. Considering that DM may be a risk factor for neurodegenerative diseases, exenatide provides both clinical benefits and cost-effectiveness when considering both PD and DM.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 35951654 ↗

Related research