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Hei Hang Edmund Yiu

Centre for Safe Medication Practice and Research, Department of Pharmacology and Pharmacy, Li Ka Shing Faculty of Medicine, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR, China.

1 paper in the library · publishing 2026

Papers

Cost-effectiveness of esketamine versus alternative treatment strategies for treatment-resistant depression in Hong Kong: A multi-armed modeling study.

PLoS medicine April 1, 2026 Yifan Li, Vivien Kin Yi Chan, Mark Jit et al.

Esketamine nasal spray, a rapid-acting antidepressant for treatment-resistant depression (TRD), was not cost-effective compared with most commonly used third-line strategies in Hong Kong. A Markov model simulated adults with TRD over five years and compared esketamine plus an antidepressant against six alternatives: combination therapy (two antidepressants), augmentation (antipsychotic or lithium), psychotherapy alone, psychotherapy plus antidepressant, repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) plus antidepressant, and electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) plus antidepressant. Esketamine's incremental cost-effectiveness ratios ranged from US$134,127 to US$312,750 per quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) versus augmentation, combination, psychotherapy, and psychotherapy plus antidepressant—all above a US$50,000/QALY threshold. It was more cost-effective than rTMS (dominated) and ECT (ICER: US$322,407/QALY). Combination therapy was the most cost-effective strategy. Findings rely on indirect comparisons and may not reflect real-world patients.