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Cost-Utility of Group Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for Fibromyalgia Versus Recommended Drugs: An Economic Analysis Alongside a 6-Month Randomized Controlled Trial Conducted in Spain (EFFIGACT Study)

APA Citation

Luciano, J., D'Amico, F., Feliu-Soler, A., McCracken, L., Aguado, J., Penarrubia-Maria, M., . . . Garcia-Campayo, J. (2017). Cost-utility of group acceptance and commitment therapy for fibromyalgia versus recommended drugs: An economic analysis alongside a 6-month randomized controlled trial conducted in spain (EFFIGACT study). Journal of Pain, 18(7), 868-880. doi:10.1016/j.jpain.2017.03.001

Publication Topic
ACT: Empirical
Publication Type
Article
Language
English
Keyword(s)
Fibromyalgia acceptance and commitment therapy cost utility cost effectiveness quality-adjusted life years
Abstract

The aim of this study was to analyze the cost utility of a group-based form of acceptance and commitment therapy (GACT) in patients with fibromyalgia (FM) compared with patients receiving recommended pharmacological treatment (RPT) or on a waiting list (WL). The data were derived from a previously published study, a randomized controlled trial that focused on clinical outcomes. Health economic outcomes included health-related quality of life and health care use at baseline and at 6-month follow-up using the EuroQoL and the Client Service Receipt Inventory, respectively. Analyses included quality-adjusted life years, direct and indirect cost differences, and incremental cost effectiveness ratios. A total of 156 FM patients were randomized (51 GACT, 52 RPT, 53 WL). GACT was related to significantly less direct costs over the 6-month study period compared with both control arms (GACT €824.2 ± 1,062.7 vs RPT €1,730.7 ± 1,656.8 vs WL €2,462.7 ± 2,822.0). Lower direct costs for GACT compared with RPT were due to lower costs from primary care visits and FM-related medications. The incremental cost effectiveness ratios were dominant in the completers’ analysis and remained robust in the sensitivity analyses. In conclusion, acceptance and commitment therapy appears to be a cost-effective treatment compared with RPT in patients with FM.