Economic Evaluation of Safflower Yellow Injection for the Treatment of Patients with Stable Angina Pectoris in China: A Cost-Effectiveness Analysis.

OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study was to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of Safflower Yellow Injection (SYI) plus conventional treatment (SYI group) versus conventional treatment only (conventional group) for the treatment of stable angina pectoris (SAP) patients in China. METHODS A decision-tree model was constructed and the treatment impact was estimated for up to 1 year. The data, including treatment effectiveness, episodes of angina pectoris (AP)-associated hospitalization and its in-hospital mortality, mortality rate of heart diseases, and cost of hospitalization, were obtained from literature. The costs of medications were calculated based on their average bidding prices in China. The authors also conducted a doctor survey to obtain cost associated with death of cardiovascular events. Sensitivity analysis was performed to evaluate the robustness of the results. RESULTS SAP patients in the SYI group (n = 1000) gained incremental 66.01 quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) at a cost of $250,294 compared with patients receiving conventional treatment, yielding an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of $3,791/QALY, which was less than Chinese GDP per capita and is considered to be highly cost effective per WHO-recommended economic evaluation guidelines. Sensitivity analysis indicated that the results were robust with variations for all major parameters of the model. CONCLUSION SYI combined with conventional treatment is a highly cost-effective therapy option compared with the conventional treatment for treatment of SAP in China.

[1]  N. Freemantle,et al.  Ranolazine for the treatment of chronic stable angina: a cost-effectiveness analysis from the UK perspective , 2015, BMJ Open.

[2]  J. Spertus,et al.  Frequency of angina pectoris and secondary events in patients with stable coronary heart disease (from the Heart and Soul Study). , 2014, The American journal of cardiology.

[3]  He Sun,et al.  Chronic Stable Angina Is Associated with Lower Health-Related Quality of Life: Evidence from Chinese Patients , 2014, PloS one.

[4]  L. Goldman,et al.  Cost-Effectiveness of Optimal Use of Acute Myocardial Infarction Treatments and Impact on Coronary Heart Disease Mortality in China , 2014, Circulation. Cardiovascular quality and outcomes.

[5]  Z. Fang,et al.  Association of dysglycemia and all-cause mortality across the spectrum of coronary artery disease. , 2013, Mayo Clinic proceedings.

[6]  M. Johannesson,et al.  Population health status in China: EQ-5D results, by age, sex and socio-economic status, from the National Health Services Survey 2008 , 2010, Quality of Life Research.

[7]  C. Lau,et al.  Fibrinogen, angina and coronary heart disease in a Chinese population. , 2000, Atherosclerosis.

[8]  Li Chang-ping Analysis on hospitalization expense of angina patients with medical insurance and its influencing factors , 2012 .

[9]  K. Qiu Clinical Study of Safflower Yellow Injection in Treatment of Patient with Coronary Heart Disease and Angina Pectoris , 2006 .

[10]  Qiong Zhang,et al.  [A clinical study of Safflower Yellow injection in treating coronary heart disease angina pectoris with Xin-blood stagnation syndrome]. , 2005, Chinese journal of integrative medicine.