| Literature DB >> 17263879 |
Richard Reithinger1, Paul G Coleman.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although Kabul city, Afghanistan, is currently the worldwide largest focus of cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) with an estimated 67,500 cases, donor interest in CL has been comparatively poor because the disease is non-fatal. Since 1998 HealthNet TPO (HNTPO) has implemented leishmaniasis diagnosis and treatment services in Kabul and in 2003 alone 16,390 were treated patients in six health clinics in and around the city. The aim of our study was to calculate the cost-effectiveness for the implemented treatment regimen of CL patients attending HNTPO clinics in the Afghan complex emergency setting.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17263879 PMCID: PMC1790896 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2334-7-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
One-year non-medical and medical program costs to treat cutaneous leishmaniasis in Kabul, Afghanistan in 2003.
| Item | Total Cost (US$) |
| Expatriate Staff | 38,880.00 |
| National Staff | 39,780.00 |
| Transport | 10,800.00 |
| Tools and Equipment | 7,740.00 |
| Communication | 3,120.00 |
| Operational | 28,500.00 |
| Patient record forms [@US$0.1 pp] | 1,639.00 |
| Laboratory materials for drug administration [@US$ 0.5 pp visit] | 63,265.40 |
| Sodium stibogluconate [@US$ 3 per vial; 12,440 vials used] | 37,320.03 |
| 7% Administrative Overhead Cost | 16,173.11 |
Listed are costs for all human and operational resources directly involved in leishmaniasis treatment activities as implemented in Kabul by HealthNet TPO (HNTPO). Costs for these resources were derived from proposals approved by donors as well as corresponding expenditures as reported by HNTPO's accounting department. The cost of the sodium stibogluconate is based on patient treatment regimens outlined in Materials and Methods. Abbreviation: Pp, per person. The full cost breakdown is available from the authors.
Figure 1Flow diagram of cost-effectiveness analysis evaluating different treatment options for cutaneous leishmaniasis in Kabul, Afghanistan. Represented are the number of patients that were diagnosed, treated and cured in HealthNet TPO's operational leishmaniasis program activities in 2003. Letters represent rates of cure and compliance, as modelled in Table 2.
Selected clinical variables for compared treatment protocols.
| 'Standard Treatment' | Triangular | 0.70 Kabul estimate | 0.701 | Estimated from 17 |
| 0.93 [Maximum] | Estimated from 18 and 20 | |||
| 0.48 [Minimum] | Estimated from 19 and 21 | |||
| Intralesional SbV ( | Triangular | 0.75 Kabul estimate | 0.721 | 17† |
| 0.91 [Maximum] | 18† | |||
| 0.50 [Minimum] | 19‡ | |||
| Intramuscular SbV ( | Triangular | 0.45 Kabul estimate | 0.604 | 17 |
| 1.00 [Maximum] | 20† | |||
| 0.36 [Minimum] | 21‡ | |||
| 'Standard Treatment' | Triangular | 0.74 Kabul estimate | 0.824 | Estimated from 17 |
| 1.00 [Maximum] | Estimate, not based on data | |||
| 0.74 [Minimum] | Estimated from 17 | |||
| Intralesional SbV ( | Triangular | 0.76 Kabul estimate | 0.840 | 17 |
| 1.00 [Maximum] | Estimate, not based on data | |||
| 0.76 [Minimum] | 17 | |||
| Intramuscular SbV ( | Triangular | 0.62 Kabul estimate | 0.750 | 17 |
| 1.00 [Maximum] | Estimate, not based on data | |||
| 0.62 [Minimum] | 17 | |||
| 1.000 | Estimate, not based on data |
Parameter distribution was simulated as described using @risk software. The triangular distribution was used to describe clinical parameter distributions. This is standard practice in cost-effectiveness analyses22 to estimate parameter inputs for which the variation is known (minimum and maximum estimates, Kabul estimate), but for which the precise nature of the distribution is not. Parameter estimates were taken from published clinical trials evaluating treatment alternatives for cutaneous leishmaniasis (minimum and maximum estimates) with data from HealthNet TPO's operational program in Kabul (Kabul estimate)17 being our 'best guess' and, hence, mode of the distribution. a, b, d, e refer to parameter estimates used in Figure 1. Drug efficacy estimates came from studies evaluating the therapeutic efficacy of pentavalent antimonial drugs (SbV) for cutaneous leishmaniasis, i.e. sodium stibogluconate (†) or meglumine antimoniate (‡)
Figure 2Tornado diagram of the impact of variation of model input parameters on cost-effectiveness estimates for cutaneous leishmaniasis treatment in Kabul, Afghanistan. Tornado diagram showing how cost-effectiveness of cutaneous leishmaniasis treatment would change if one of the input parameters would be reduced or increased, as specified.