Cost-Effectiveness of Psilocybin-Assisted Therapy Versus Standard of Care for Patients With Treatment-Resistant Depression
The study evaluated whether psilocybin-assisted therapy is cost-effective compared to standard treatments for treatment-resistant depression.
Specifically, it aimed to:
Compare costs vs health outcomes (e.g., quality-adjusted life years, QALYs)
Determine if psilocybin therapy provides good value for money within a healthcare system
Key Findings
Compared with standard of care, psilocybin-assisted therapy (PAT) was cost-effective for treatment-resistant depression in a 6-month base-case analysis.
This economic advantage of PAT was maintained in long-term analyses extending to 30 years under alternative efficacy-waning assumptions.
Early clinical benefits appear to drive PAT’s economic value by reducing downstream treatment failures and chronic care costs.
Background
Treatment-resistant depression (TRD) imposes a substantial public health and economic burden. Although psilocybin-assisted therapy (PAT) has shown clinical promise, its economic value remains uncertain. This study evaluated the cost-effectiveness of PAT compared with the standard of care for TRD.
Methods
A Markov model adopting a US healthcare perspective simulated patient transitions among health states (remission, response, non-response, and relapse) every 6-week cycle. Model inputs were derived from randomized controlled trials and relevant published literature. Outcomes included quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios. Sensitivity analyses were conducted to assess uncertainty in key parameters, dosing regimens, retreatment strategies, and psilocybin prices. Scenario analyses extended the time horizon to 30 years to examine treatment persistence and efficacy waning.
Results
Compared with the standard of care, PAT was more effective and less costly, yielding approximately $7000 in cost savings and a gain of 0.10 QALYs per patient. These economic advantages persisted across variations in key parameters, dosing strategies, retreatment assumptions, and psilocybin prices in sensitivity analyses. Extending the horizon to 30 years in scenario analyses increased cumulative savings to $215 900 with gains of 9.87 QALYs. PAT remained cost-effective under all efficacy-waning assumptions over the 30-year horizon.
Conclusion
This modeling analysis provides preliminary evidence that PAT may be a cost-effective option for TRD management. Consistent findings across extended time horizons suggest that its economic value is largely driven by early clinical benefits that offset downstream chronic care costs. Longitudinal real-world evidence will be essential to validate these findings and inform sustainable integration into clinical practice.
Ziadi Y, Park T Cost-Effectiveness of Psilocybin-Assisted Therapy Versus Standard of Care for Patients With Treatment-Resistant Depression Value in Health Regional Issues, 2026; 0 Read Paper
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