pubmed-article:17305414 | pubmed:abstractText | Invasive fungal infections are becoming increasingly prevalent and are more frequently the aetiological agents responsible for nosocomial infections. Since mid-2002, two new antifungal drugs - voriconazole, a third-generation azole, and caspofungin, a member of a new class of drugs called echinocandins - have been marketed in Spain. Both drugs have proven [corrected] efficacy in the treatment of aspergillosis, are better tolerated than amphotericin B and are cheaper [corrected] than liposomal amphotericin B. The objective of this study was to conduct an economic evaluation of voriconazole versus caspofungin for the treatment of invasive aspergillosis in Spain. | lld:pubmed |