Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is a cardiovascular disorder characterized by significant symptom burden. This study aims to evaluate the net clinical benefit of mavacamten (a first-in-class cardiac myosin inhibitor) ± beta-blockers/calcium channel blockers (BB/CCBs) compared to BB/CCB monotherapy for Chinese patients with obstructive HCM. METHODS: A five-state Markov model (NYHA classes I-IV and death) was developed from a Chinese healthcare system perspective. Patients were initialised in NYHA II or III states, mirroring the baseline distribution in the EXPLORER-CN trial (NCT05174416). State transitions were simulated using cycle-specific probabilities derived from trial data and validated extrapolation assumptions. All-cause mortality risks incorporated disease-specific and extra surgical mortality rates. Treatment sequencing rules reflected escalation pathways (e.g., non-response, adverse events, or eligibility for septural reduction therapy [SRT]), informed by Chinese clinical practice. Health utilities were mapped algorithmically from EXPLORER-CN patient-level EQ-5D responses. RESULTS: Over a lifetime horizon, mavacamten ± BB/CCBs demonstrated superior health outcomes versus BB/CCB monotherapy, with incremental gains in life-years (15.76 vs. 14.40) and quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs: 13.69 vs. 11.38). CONCLUSION: Mavacamten provides substantial health benefits for Chinese obstructive HCM patients, including clinically meaningful improvements in survival and quality-of-life metrics relative to standard care.