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Cost-effectiveness of 123I-FP-CIT SPECT in the differential diagnosis of essential tremor and Parkinson's disease in Italy

✍ Scribed by Angelo Antonini; Patrizia Berto; Stefania Lopatriello; Filippo Tamma; Lieven Annemans; Mike Chambers


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2008
Tongue
English
Weight
105 KB
Volume
23
Category
Article
ISSN
0885-3185

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Economic evaluation (Italian NHS perspective) modeling ^123^I‐FP‐CIT SPECT (DaTSCAN®) compared to clinical judgment alone for differentiating essential tremor (ET) from Parkinson's Disease (PD). A 5‐year Markov model was constructed to assess the cost‐effectiveness of ^123^I‐FP‐CIT SPECT to differentiate ET from PD in patients referred to a movement disorder specialist in Italy. Published data and a double‐round, Delphi panel of 12 specialists populated the model. Effectiveness was expressed as the projected Years on potentially beneficial therapy (PBTYs). Costs were expressed in Euros (2005 values). The model suggests that over 5 years, the “current” diagnostic pathway generated an average of 2.3 PBTYs/patient at an estimated cost of €8,864. ^123^I‐FP‐CIT SPECT generated an average of 4.1 PBTYs/patient at an estimated cost of €8,422, which represented an additional 1.8 PBTYs at a cost saving of €442/patient (€341 when discounted at 5%). The estimated cost‐effectiveness of ^123^I‐FP‐CIT SPECT is under €1,000 per PBTY gained when the underlying disease prevalence is high (55–70%), and cost‐saving at prevalence under 55%. ^123^I‐FP‐CIT SPECT is likely to be regarded as economically advantageous to differentiate ET from PD, increasing time on potentially beneficial therapy at a lower overall cost to the healthcare system. © 2008 Movement Disorder Society


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Brain parenchyma sonography and 123I-FP-
✍ Florian Doepp; Michail Plotkin; Lara Siegel; Anatol Kivi; Doreen Gruber; Elmar L 📂 Article 📅 2008 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 103 KB 👁 1 views

## Abstract We aimed to investigate the accuracy of transcranial brain parenchyma sonography (TCS) for differentiation between idiopathic Parkinson's disease (PD) and essential tremor (ET) in comparison to ^123^I‐FP‐CIT SPECT (FP‐CIT SPECT). Seventy‐four patients, in whom PD or ET was suspected on