| Literature DB >> 15932647 |
Patricia M Herman1, Benjamin M Craig, Opher Caspi.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Out-of-pocket expenditures of over 34 billion dollars per year in the US are an apparent testament to a widely held belief that complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) therapies have benefits that outweigh their costs. However, regardless of public opinion, there is often little more than anecdotal evidence on the health and economic implications of CAM therapies. The objectives of this study are to present an overview of economic evaluation and to expand upon a previous review to examine the current scope and quality of CAM economic evaluations.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2005 PMID: 15932647 PMCID: PMC1182346 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6882-5-11
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Complement Altern Med ISSN: 1472-6882 Impact factor: 3.659
Three forms of full economic evaluations
| Cost-benefit Analysis (CBA) | Cost-effectiveness Analysis (CEA) | Cost-utility Analysis (CUA) | |
| Number of Health Outcomes | Multiple outcomes | One outcome | Multiple outcomes |
| Unit of Health Outcomes | Summary measure in monetary units (eg, US dollars) | Natural units (eg, reduction in number of hot flashes) | Summary measure in quality of life units (eg, quality-adjusted life-years, QALY) |
| Results | Net benefits | Cost-effectiveness ratio* | Cost-utility ratio* |
* Results are calculated when both the costs and the effects (health outcomes) of one therapy are higher than those of another. When the costs are lower and the effects are higher for one therapy, it is said to dominate the alternative (and the alternative is said to be dominated) and no ratio is presented. C1 = total costs of alternative 1; C2 = total costs of alternative 2; B1 = monetary value of health outcomes of alternative 1; B2 = monetary value of health outcomes of alternative 2; E1 = health effects of alternative 1; E2 = health effects of alternative 2; QALY1 = quality-adjusted life-years of alternative 1; QALY2 = quality-adjusted life-years of alternative 2.
Economic outcomes to include in economic evaluation
| Type of Cost | Examples | Perspectives in Which This Cost is Included |
| Direct costs: Medical | Intervention costs: | Portion paid by health plan included in institutional perspective |
| Direct costs: Non-medical | Transportation costs | Usually all paid by the patient, so often included in individual perspective |
| Indirect costs | Lost work productivity during recuperation | Usually all paid by the patient, so often included in individual perspective |
| Intangible costs | Pain | Not usually included as costs; instead, may be included in humanistic outcomes in cost-utility analysis |
Summarized from similar tables in other references [1, 20, 22].
Types of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) therapies studied for various conditions (full/partial economic evaluations)
| Acupuncture | Homeopathy | Manual therapy | Spa therapy | Mind-body therapy | Hypnosis | Botanical medicine | Nutritional supplements | Diet | Biofeedback | Hyperbaric oxygen therapy | Miscellaneous* | TOTALS† | |
| Populations with mixed conditions‡ | 3/2 | 2/1 | 0/1 | 0/1 | 10 | ||||||||
| Back, neck, and/or leg pain | 1/0 | 5/0 | 1/0 | 1/0 | 8 | ||||||||
| Surgery | 2/1 | 2/0 | 5 | ||||||||||
| Cardiac patients | 2/0 | 1/0 | 1/0 | 4 | |||||||||
| Rheumatic disorders | 0/1 | 1/0 | 1/0 | 3 | |||||||||
| Epilepsy | 0/3 | 3 | |||||||||||
| General costs | 0/1 | 0/2 | 3 | ||||||||||
| Allergy | 0/1 | 1/0 | 2 | ||||||||||
| Cancer chemotherapy | 2/0 | 2 | |||||||||||
| Diabetic ulcers | 2/0 | 2 | |||||||||||
| Dyspepsia | 1/0 | 1/0 | 2 | ||||||||||
| EENT in children | 1/1 | 2 | |||||||||||
| Headache/migraine | 2/0 | 2 | |||||||||||
| Midwifery/obstetrics | 1/0 | 0/1 | 2 | ||||||||||
| Miscellaneous§ | 1/0 | 2/0 | 1/0 | 1/0 | 1/2 | 2/0 | 10 | ||||||
| TOTALS† | 5 | 11 | 7 | 3 | 8 | 3 | 2 | 7 | 6 | 2 | 2 | 4 | 60 |
EENT = Eye, ear, nose, and throat conditions
* Miscellaneous CAM therapies include: multivitamins, shoe orthoses, electrodermal screening, and aromatherapy.
† Some studies compared more than one CAM therapy. Therefore, totals exceed the number of studies found.
‡ Populations with mixed conditions include: patients with chronic disease, patients at one general practice (4 studies), long-term care workers, persons in Quebec health system, inner city children, and older adults (2 studies).
§Miscellaneous conditions include: anxiety, Parkinson's, psoriasis, uterine fibroids, urinary tract infection, macular degeneration, severe burn, AIDS, obesity, and hypertension.
Reporting quality of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) economic evaluations and comparable results of similar reviews in conventional medicine
| Items from the | Review of CAM Studies N (%) | Reviews of Conventional Medicine Studies N (%) |
| (1) The research question is stated | 39 (74) | 43 (16)* |
| (2) The economic importance of the research question is stated | 39 (51) | |
| (3) The perspective of the analysis is stated | 39 (33) | 228 (52)† |
| (4) The rationale for choosing the alternatives is stated | 39 (69) | |
| (5) The alternatives being compared are clearly described | 39 (74) | 228 (83)† |
| (6) The form of economic evaluation used is stated | 39 (49) | |
| (7) The choice of form of economic evaluation is justified | 39 (3) | 43 (7)* |
| (8) The source(s) of effectiveness estimates are stated | 38 (100) | |
| (9) Details of the effectiveness study are given | 36 (94) | |
| or (10) Details of the review or meta-analysis are given | 2 (50) | |
| (11) Primary outcome measures are clearly stated | 39 (95) | |
| (12) Methods to value health states are stated | 4 (100) | 228 (75)† |
| (13) Details of the subjects from which values were obtained are given | 4 (25) | 228 (76)† |
| (14) Productivity changes are reported separately | 8 (88) | |
| (15) The relevance of productivity changes is discussed | 8 (25) | |
| (16) Quantities of resources are reported separately from unit costs | 39 (67) | 43 (19)‡ |
| (17) Methods for the estimation of quantities and unit costs are described | 39 (67) | |
| (18) Currency and year are recorded | 39 (41) | 228 (68)† |
| (19) Details of adjustments for inflation or currency conversion are given | 39 (21) | 43 (21)* |
| (20) Details of any model used are given | 3 (100) | |
| (21) The choice of the model and its key parameters are justified | 3 (100) | |
| (22) Time horizon of costs and benefits is stated | 39 (100) | |
| (23) The discount rate is stated | 4 (50) | 228 (65)† |
| (24) The choice of discount rate is justified | 4 (25) | 43 (16)* |
| (25) An explanation is given if costs and benefits not discounted | 4 (50) | 8 (12)‡ |
| (26) Details of statistical tests and confidence intervals are given for stochastic data | 38 (87) | |
| (27) The approach to sensitivity analysis is given | 5 (100) | 43 (2)* |
| (28) The choice of variables for sensitivity analysis is justified | 5 (40) | 39 (79)‡ |
| (29) The ranges over which variables are varied are stated | 5 (100) | 228 (57)† |
| (30) Relevant alternatives are compared | 39 (36) | 228 (57)† |
| (31) Incremental analysis is reported | 13 (54) | 228 (46)† |
| (32) Major outcomes are presented disaggregated and aggregated | 39 (85) | |
| (33) The answer to the study question is given | 39 (69) | |
| (34) Conclusions follow from the data reported | 39 (100) | |
| (35) Conclusions are accompanied by the appropriate caveats | 39 (67) | 228 (84)† |
* Comparable estimates available from Jefferson et al, 1998 [83].
† Comparable estimates available from Neumann, 2004 [6], a systematic review of cost-utility analyses.
‡ Comparable estimates available from Gerard et al, 2000 [84], a systematic review of cost-utility analyses.
Summary of the results of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) economic evaluations with exemplary study quality
| CAM Therapy Compared to Usual Care* | Patient Population | Form of Economic Evaluation | Health Effects of CAM Compared to Usual Care† | Cost of CAM Compared to Usual Care† | |
| Liguori et al, 2000 [32] | Acupuncture | Patients with migraine | CEA | ||
| Wonderling et al, 2004 [35] | Acupuncture | Patients with chronic headache | CUA | Better | Higher‡ |
| Paterson et al, 2003 [34] | Acupuncture | Patients with dyspepsia | CEA | Similar | Similar |
| Homeopathy | CEA | Similar | Similar | ||
| Korthals-de Bos et al, 2003 [27] | Manual therapy | Patients with neck pain | CEA CUA | ||
| Brefel-Courbon et al, 2003 [50] | Spa therapy | Patients with Parkinson's disease | CEA | ||
| Van Tubergen et al, 2002 [51] | Combined spa-exercise therapy | Patients with ankylosing spondylitis | CEA CUA | Better | Higher¶ |
| Tusek et al, 1999 [53] | Complementary guided imagery | Cardiac surgery patients | CEA | ||
| van Dixhoorn and Duivenvoorden, 1999 [54] | Complementary relaxation therapy | Patients with previous myocardial infarction | CEA | ||
| Jacobsen et al, 2002 [55] | Complementary professionally-administered stress management training | Cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy | CEA | Similar | Higher‡ |
| Complementary self-administered stress management training | CEA | ||||
| Franzosi et al, 2001 [25] | Complementary omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids | Patients with recent myocardial infarction | CEA | Better | Higher |
| Smedley et al, 2004 [68] | Complementary preoperative and post operative oral nutritional supplementation | Patients undergoing lower gastrointestinal tract surgery | CEA | ||
| Norris et al, 2004 [56] | Potassium-rich diet | Postoperative cardiac patients | CEA | ||
| Ryan and Gevirtz, 2004 [76] | Biofeedback-based psychophysiological treatment | Patients with "functional" disorders (e.g., irritable bowel syndrome) | CEA | ||
| Larsen et al, 2002 [82] | Complementary custom-made biomechanical shoe orthoses | Recent military conscripts | CEA | Better | Higher |
Bold entries indicate that the CAM therapy was shown to be clearly superior to (dominate) usual care.
CEA = cost-effectiveness analysis; CUA = cost-utility analysis
* The use of the term "complementary" in this column indicates CAM therapies used in addition to usual care.
† If tests of statistical significance were performed, costs must be significantly higher or lower (and health effects significantly better or worse), or they were considered "similar."
‡ This study used both a societal and an institutional perspective, and the results were in the same direction.
¶This study used a societal perspective only. All other studies used an institutional perspective only.