ABSTRACT
Background
To model scenarios exploring potential impacts of disease-modifying therapies (DMTs) for Alzheimer’s disease (AD) dementia on future health and social care costs in the United Kingdom.
Methods
A cohort Markov model was developed using population projections and published AD epidemiological data. Stage-specific transition rates (mild cognitive impairment due to AD and mild, moderate, severe AD dementia) and health and social care cost data were applied to estimate cost outcomes over 2020–2040. Potential proportion of eligible population receiving treatment (uptake) and follow-up care models (primary vs. specialist care) were elicited from expert opinion. Scenarios combined ranges of DMT efficacy estimates, uptake, and care model. DMT price was excluded due to no UK precedent.
Results
Without DMT access, 1,038,405 people (1.5%) were projected to have AD dementia by 2040. Under the various DMT treatment scenarios, the prevalence of AD dementia by 2040 was projected to be 34,000–98,000 cases lower. Associated cumulative cost offsets were higher, £4.4–12.9billion over 2020–2040, in scenarios where most individuals received primary care follow-up, compared with majority specialist care follow-up (-£2.3billion to +£3.2billion). Assuming DMT efficacy of 25%, 58% uptake and majority primary care follow-up cumulative cost offsets increased from £4.4billion to £10.1billion by 2040 but the UK Health Service would need to diagnose and provide DMT for over a million individuals by 2030 and two million by 2040 to achieve this.
Conclusions
Potential cost offset from DMT are large but highly dependent on the model of healthcare delivery and the ability of healthcare systems to scale up diagnosis and treatment services.