Cost-Effectiveness of Drug Therapies in Management of Hypertension in a Nigerian Teaching Hospital: a Utility-Based Analysis
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Date
2025-11-25
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Dhaka Univ. J. Pharm. Sci
Abstract
ABSTRACT: Efficient resource allocation is vital for managing hypertension in Nigeria due to the high disease
burden and limited healthcare resources. This study aims to assess the cost effectiveness of hypertension therapies at
the University of Ilorin Teaching Hospital over one year by reviewing drug use, analyzing costs effectiveness of
treatment options and examining their impact on healthcare policy and resource allocation. A sample size of 356 case
notes was derived from 40,009 ambulatory hypertensive patients. The drug utilization study involved a one-year
retrospective review of the 356 case notes, conducted from January to December 2023. The EuroQol 5-Dimensions
5-Level questionnaire (EQ-5D-5L) was used to determine the effectiveness of treatment options based on qualityadjusted
life years (QALYs). Of the 693 prescriptions identified, 94 (13.56%) contained monotherapy, 328(47.3%)
two-drug combination and 271(39.11%) three-drug combination. Amlodipine + lisinopril appeared to be more costeffective
than amlodipine + telmisartan, which in turn was more cost-effective than both amlodipine + indapamide
and amlodipine + ramipril, leaving amlodipine+ lisinopril as the most cost effective out of analysed options for the
Nigeria healthcare system. ICERs obtained were robust to parameter variation on probabilistic sensitivity analysis.
Inclusion of amlodipine + lisinopril in the WHO essential medicine list, hospital formularies, and standard treatment
guidelines as components of drug policy is justified and would promote rational drug use, improve treatment
outcomes and optimize resource utilization in the management of hypertension in Nigeria.
Description
Keywords
Hypertension, antihypertensives, cost -minimization analysis, Nigerian teaching hospital.
Citation
Dhaka Univ. J. Pharm. Sci. 24(2): 147-156, 2025 (December) DOI: https://doi.org/10.3329/dujps.v24i2.86365