Issue: February 2018
February 16, 2018
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Herpes zoster subunit vaccine cost-effective among older patients

Issue: February 2018
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Herpes zoster subunit vaccine is an effective, cost-saving option for shingles prevention compared with live-attenuated herpes zoster vaccine among adults aged 60 years or older, recent findings suggest.

Perspective from William Schaffner, MD

“The live-attenuated herpes zoster vaccine (ZVL) is recommended for immunocompetent adults 60 years or older, but the efficacy wanes with age and over time,” Phuc Le, PhD, MPH, and Michael B. Rothberg, MD, MPH, both from the Center for Value-Based Care Research at Cleveland Clinic, wrote in JAMA Internal Medicine. “A new adjuvanted herpes zoster subunit vaccine (HZ/su) has higher efficacy but might be more expensive. The choice of vaccines depends on their relative values.”

HZ/su, marketed as Shingrix (GlaxoSmithKline), was approved by the FDA in October 2017. The CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, or ACIP, then voted to recommend HZ/su over the only other FDA-approved vaccine, ZVL (Zostavax, Merck).

Using a Markov decision model, Le and Rothberg investigated the cost-effectiveness of HZ/su (two-dose series) in comparison with no vaccination and vaccination with ZVL (single dose) among a cohort of immunocompetent adults aged 60 years or older.

Data showed that at all ages, HZ/su was more effective and less expensive ($280 per series) than ZVL ($213 per dose). Based on vaccination age, the incremental cost-effectiveness ratios for HZ/su ranged from $20,038 to $30,084 per quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) compared with no vaccination. The researchers said the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio was insensitive to most model inputs, especially those that had considerable uncertainty and where adherence to the second dose was more than 50%.

They noted that HZ/su would have lower overall costs than ZVL up to a price of $350 per series. For older adults, HZ/su was 73% likely to be cost-effective at $50,000 per QALY.

“Because of its superior efficacy, HZ/su was cost-saving compared with ZVL and cost-effective compared with no vaccination in most scenarios,” Le and Rothberg wrote.

However, they warned that the ACIP’s recommendation stating a preference for HZ/su over ZVL could lead to future price increases, which would render the vaccine no longer cost-effective. “Therefore, a recommendation linked to periodic reassessment of cost-effectiveness based on the vaccine price might help to mitigate the effect of the recommendation on vaccine affordability,” they concluded.

In an accompanying editorial, Mehdi Najafzadeh, PhD, from Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School, wrote that the findings by Le and Rothberg demonstrate the clear benefits of HZ/su over ZVL in disease prevention and high economic value.

“The value of HZ/su vaccine would be even higher if it could be marketed at a price comparable to that of ZVL,” Najafzadeh concluded. “A lower price would avoid additional budget implications for patients and payers and would allow wider use of this innovative product in the U.S. elderly population.” – by Alaina Tedesco

Disclosures: The authors report no relevant financial disclosures.