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Clinical Publications of Interest 2026-01

Cost-Effectiveness of Third-Generation HMEs

Clinical Publications
January 7, 2026

Clinical Publications of Interest 2026-01

This issue delves into third-generation HMEs, which have been shown to offer better functionality over previous generations. With previous cost-effectiveness studies primarily targeting second-generation HMEs, this is the first study investigating the cost-effectiveness of the third-generation HMEs. The primary outcomes suggest that while third-generation HMEs carry greater healthcare costs, they are more cost-effective and reduce health complications more than second-generation HMEs and no HMEs.

Oridate N, Smedby T, Ruzza C, Roth M, Mehta M, Akachi Y, et al. Cost-effectiveness analysis of third-generation heat and moisture exchangers in patients who underwent laryngectomy in Japan. Cost Eff Resour Alloc. 2025;23(1):54

The new generation of HME offers better humidification and breathability than second-generation counterparts

Objectives of the study

Third-generation HMEs have been available in the Japanese market since November 2024, with insurance coverage allowing for broad adoption of the HMEs. This study considered the perspective of the Japanese public healthcare payer.

A Markov model spanning a 10-year period was used to simulate a TL patient group

The cost-effectiveness analysis compared the intervention (third-generation HMEs) to second-generation HMEs and no HMEs.

Primary outcomes:

Secondary outcomes:

The main cost-effectiveness outcome was the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) per QALY

Third-generation HMEs proved more costly, yet more cost-effective than both second-generation and no HMEs

Users of third-generation HMEs experience fewer adverse health outcomes

Transition probabilities highlight the importance of maintaining a good health status and not shifting into a worse state

Key Takeaways

References

1. Longobardi Y, Galli J, Di Cesare T, D'Alatri L, Settimi S, Mele D, et al. Optimizing Pulmonary Outcomes After Total Laryngectomy: Crossover Study on New Heat and Moisture Exchangers. Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2022;167(6):929–40.
2. Almajali O, Balk M, Rupp R, Allner M, Sievert M, Iro H, et al. The Effects of a "New Generation" of Heat and Moisture Exchangers in Laryngectomized Patients with Previous Heat and Moisture Changer Experience. Ear Nose Throat J. 2023:1455613231200769.
3. Ward EC, Hancock K, Boxall J, Burns CL, Spurgin AL, Lehn B, et al. Post-laryngectomy pulmonary and related symptom changes following adoption of an optimal day-and-night heat and moisture exchanger (HME) regimen. Head Neck. 2023;45(4):939–51.
4. Parrilla C, Minni A, Bogaardt H, Macri GF, Battista M, Roukos R, et al. Pulmonary Rehabilitation After Total Laryngectomy: A Multicenter Time-Series Clinical Trial Evaluating the Provox XtraHME in HME-Naive Patients. Ann Otol Rhinol Laryngol. 2015;124(9):706–13.

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