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Wiley InterScience

Addiction

Addiction

Volume 96 Issue 9, Pages 1267 - 1278

Published Online: 3 May 2002

Journal compilation © 2010 Society for the Study of Addiction



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The cost–effectiveness of buprenorphine maintenance therapy for opiate addiction in the United States
Paul G. Barnett , Gregory S. Zaric , Margaret L. Brandeau
  1 Health Economics Resource Center, Veterans Affairs Palo Alto Health Care System, Menlo Park, CA and the Department of Health Research and Policy, Stanford University, Stanford, CA   2 Ivey School of Business, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada   3 Department of Management Science and Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA
Copyright Society for the Study of Addiction to Alcohol and Other Drugs

ABSTRACT


Aims. To determine the cost-effectiveness of buprenorphine maintenance therapy for opiate addiction in the United States, particularly its effect on the HIV epidemic.
Design. We developed a dynamic model to capture the effects of adding buprenorphine maintenance to the current opiate dependence treatment system. We evaluated incremental costs, including all health-care costs, and incremental effectiveness, measured as quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) of survival. We considered communities with HIV prevalence among injection drug users of 5% and 40%. Because no price has been set in the United States for a dose of buprenorphine, we considered three prices per dose: $5, $15, and $30.
Findings. If buprenorphine increases the number of individuals in maintenance treatment by 10%, but does not affect the number of individuals receiving methadone maintenance, the cost-effectiveness ratios for buprenorphine maintenance therapy are less than $45 000 per QALY gained for all prices, in both the low-prevalence and high-prevalence communities. If the same number of individuals enter buprenorphine maintenance (10% of the number currently in methadone), but half are injection drug users newly entering maintenance and half are individuals who switched from methadone to buprenorphine, the cost-effectiveness ratios in both communities are less than $45 000 per QALY gained for the $5 and $15 prices, and greater than $65 000 per QALY gained for the $30 price.
Conclusions. At a price of $5 or less per dose, buprenorphine maintenance is cost-effective under all scenarios we considered. At $15 per dose, it is cost-effective if its adoption does not lead to a net decline in methadone use, or if a medium to high value is assigned to the years of life lived by injection drug users and those in maintenance therapy. At $30 per dose, buprenorphine will be cost-effective only under the most optimistic modeling assumptions.


DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1046/j.1360-0443.2001.96912676.x About DOI

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