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Long-term health care resource and cost savings with allergy immunotherapy: REACT study results

Benedikt Fritzsching, Celeste Porsbjerg, Marco Contoli, Sarah Buchs, Julie Rask Larsen, Nick Freemantle

5 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Allergy immunotherapy (AIT) can be administered as subcutaneous immunotherapy (SCIT) injections in the clinic or as sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT) tablets at home after initiation under medical supervision. To achieve long-term, sustained effects, a 3-year treatment duration is recommended.

OBJECTIVE: Our aim was to assess the association of AIT (SCIT and SLIT tablets) with long-term health care resource use (HRU) and costs in subjects with allergic rhinitis.

METHODS: REACT was a retrospective propensity score-matched cohort study using claims data from a German health insurance database (2007-2017), with up to 9 years of follow-up after AIT initiation. HRU and costs were evaluated for hospitalizations, ambulatory care visits, and prescriptions, in subjects who received AIT versus in matched controls with allergic rhinitis who had not received AIT, as well as for SCIT and SLIT tablets.

RESULTS: Across all 9 years, the subjects who received AIT had a significantly lower incidence of hospitalization than the controls did. Generally, proportions of subjects with ambulatory care visits and hospitalizations were lower, and length of hospitalization was shorter, for those receiving SLIT tablets than those who received SCIT. Total costs were significantly higher with AIT versus for the controls during the treatment period (years 1 to 3), driven by prescriptions and ambulatory care visits, but they were lower in years 4 to 9. During years 1 to 3, prescription costs were generally higher for SLIT tablets than for SCIT, whereas ambulatory care costs were numerically lower. In most years, hospitalization costs were numerically lower for SLIT tablets than for SCIT.

CONCLUSION: Initial higher HRU and costs of AIT during the expected treatment period are offset in the long term. At-home administration of SLIT tablets may further reduce ambulatory care costs.

Original languageEnglish
Article number100197
JournalThe journal of allergy and clinical immunology. Global
Volume3
Issue number1
Pages (from-to)100197
ISSN2772-8293
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Feb 2024

Keywords

  • Allergic rhinitis
  • REACT
  • allergy immunotherapy
  • cost
  • health care resource use
  • real-world evidence
  • subcutaneous immunotherapy
  • sublingual immunotherapy tablet

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