Economic evaluation of anti-epileptic medicines for autistic children with epilepsy

Tinelli, M.ORCID logo, Roddy, Á., Knapp, M.ORCID logo, Arango, C., Mendez, M. A., Cusak, J., Murphy, D., Canitano, R., Oakley, B. & Quoidbach, V. (2024). Economic evaluation of anti-epileptic medicines for autistic children with epilepsy. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 54(7), 2733 – 2741. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10803-023-05941-8
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We examine the cost-effectiveness of treating epilepsy with anti-epileptic medicines in autistic children, looking at impacts on healthcare providers (in England, Ireland, Italy and Spain) and children’s families (in Ireland). We find carbamazepine to be the most cost-effective drug to try first in children with newly diagnosed focal seizures. For England and Spain, oxcarbazepine is the most cost-effective treatment when taken as additional treatment for those children whose response to monotherapy is suboptimal. In Ireland and Italy, gabapentin is the most cost-effective option. Our additional scenario analysis presents the aggregate cost to families with autistic children who are being treated for epilepsy: this cost is considerably higher than healthcare provider expenditure.

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