What can we learn from Infliximab?
The CCOHTA report: A gastroenterologist’s viewpoint R Hilsden The treatment of severe Crohn’s disease is difficult, and approximately 20% of patients do not respond to conventional therapy, including corticosteroids and immunosuppressives. Infliximab is one of the only treatments of proven efficacy in this group. Awareness of its benefits and risks is incomplete, because the drug has only recently been introduced and published research data are relatively sparse. Economic analyses help to evaluate the value of interventions that are both effective and expensive, but their validity is compromised by input data that involve questionable assumptions. They should not, therefore, be the only basis for funding decisions. Patients with severe Crohn’s disease are frequently unable to be gainfully employed and thus incur significant indirect costs. In a recent study by the Canadian Coordinating Office for Health Technology Assessment (CCOHTA), infliximab was deemed to not meet commonly accepted