HPE Managing CINV pocket guide 2019 | Page 44

oncology patients. 4 Even when non-life-threatening, side effects such as CINV have negative consequences on a patient’s quality of life, impairing social, physical and emotional functioning, and worsened health outcomes due to dose reduction or therapy discontinuation. 5,6 Besides the clinical impact, CINV events impact the cost of cancer care for both individuals and healthcare systems, as they can lead to increased hospitalisation, more emergency room visits and increased care. 5 Considering that such effects of chemotherapy can be limited with the appropriate antiemetic treatment in up to 80% of patients, 7 the development of innovative therapies and the study of pharmacoeconomics related to them is particularly crucial. Health economics of CINV There are different procedures to classify costs in order to evaluate the global economic burden of nausea and vomiting due to chemotherapy. The most common categorisation organises costs as direct and productivity losses. 8 Direct costs can be further divided into healthcare and non- healthcare. Healthcare direct costs are those incurred in providing a certain healthcare intervention. The costs of antiemetic drugs, hospitalisation and emergency department visits are among the 44 | 2019 | hospitalpharmacyeurope.com most studied direct healthcare costs for CINV. The resources consumed to deliver care (such as the cost of telephone charges for calls made because of CINV, the cost of transportation to the hospital or the cost for informal care provided to patients by family members) are referred to as non-healthcare direct costs. 9 Productivity losses incur as a result of loss of productivity due to premature death, absenteeism (work days lost to receive medical care for CINV or for severe pain) and presenteeism (lower productivity due to experiencing nausea or vomiting while at work). 10 Productivity losses are particularly relevant in the case of CINV as they can account for over 60% of total costs. 11 In addition to direct costs and productivity losses, patients suffer from a severe deterioration of quality of life (sometimes known as intangible costs) because of pain associated with certain side effects such as CINV. 10 In health economics, these intangible costs are extremely difficult to evaluate in monetary terms and for this reason they are seldom included in cost-of-illness studies but assessed through generic or disease-specific quality of life scales. The categorisation by Drummond et al, which organises resources according to whether they are used in the healthcare sector, consumed in other