Economic Evaluations of Pharmacologic Treatment for Opioid Use Disorder: A Systematic Literature Review
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Highlights
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There is new evidence on buprenorphine and strengthened evidence on methadone, indicating that both are economically advantageous treatments for opioid use disorder compared with no pharmacotherapy.
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Approximately half of the recent cost-effectiveness studies used a generic preference-based measure of effectiveness (ie, quality-adjusted life-years or disability-adjusted life-years), limiting broad comparison across diseases/disorders because quality-adjusted life-years or disability-adjusted life-years are the only health economic effectiveness measures with commonly accepted value thresholds. There is wide variation in disease/disorder-specific measures, thereby limiting comparisons within the substance use disorder literature.
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More economic evidence is needed on injectable naltrexone and novel treatment-delivery modalities.
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