| Literature DB >> 18923927 |
Sarah Wordsworth1, James Buchanan, Regina Regan, Val Davison, Kim Smith, Sara Dyer, Carolyn Campbell, Edward Blair, Eddy Maher, Jenny Taylor, Samantha J L Knight.
Abstract
Array based comparative genomic hybridisation (aCGH) is a powerful technique for detecting clinically relevant genome imbalance and can offer 40 to > 1000 times the resolution of karyotyping. Indeed, idiopathic learning disability (ILD) studies suggest that a genome-wide aCGH approach makes 10-15% more diagnoses involving genome imbalance than karyotyping. Despite this, aCGH has yet to be implemented as a routine NHS service. One significant obstacle is the perception that the technology is prohibitively expensive for most standard NHS clinical cytogenetics laboratories. To address this, we investigated the cost-effectiveness of aCGH versus standard cytogenetic analysis for diagnosing idiopathic learning disability (ILD) in the NHS. Cost data from four participating genetics centres were collected and analysed. In a single test comparison, the average cost of aCGH was pound442 and the average cost of karyotyping was pound117 with array costs contributing most to the cost difference. This difference was not a key barrier when the context of follow up diagnostic tests was considered. Indeed, in a hypothetical cohort of 100 ILD children, aCGH was found to cost less per diagnosis ( pound3,118) than a karyotyping and multi-telomere FISH approach ( pound4,957). We conclude that testing for genomic imbalances in ILD using microarray technology is likely to be cost-effective because long-term savings can be made regardless of a positive (diagnosis) or negative result. Earlier diagnoses save costs of additional diagnostic tests. Negative results are cost-effective in minimising follow-up test choice. The use of aCGH in routine clinical practice warrants serious consideration by healthcare providers.Entities:
Year: 2007 PMID: 18923927 PMCID: PMC2276893 DOI: 10.1007/s11568-007-9005-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genomic Med ISSN: 1871-7934
Fig. 1Overview of aCGH protocol (reproduced from Knight and Regan (2006) with permission from S. Karger and AG. Basel)
Fig. 2Array-CGH testing process
Fig. 3Karyotyping testing process
Staff costs for aCGH and Karyotyping
| Medical technical officer | Clinical scientist | Consultant grade scientist | Secretarial staff | Total time | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Array CGH | |||||
| Cost per hour range (£.p)a | 13.01–16.83 | 18.34–24.71 | 40.17–49.73 | N/A | N/A |
| Median cost per hour (£.p) | 14.69 | 21.65 | 44.09 | N/A | N/A |
| Hands-on time (minutes) | 61.00 | 76.00 | 5.00 | N/A | 142.00 |
| Cost per sample range (£.p) | 9.67–12.51 | 23.45–31.44 | 3.35–4.14 | N/A | 36.47–48.09 |
| Cost per sample (£.p)b | 10.92 | 27.55 | 3.67 | N/A | 42.14 |
| Karyotyping | |||||
| Cost per hour range (£.p)a | 15.46–19.35 | 23.00–24.56 | 43.78–44.40 | 12.98 | N/A |
| Hands-on time range (minutes) | 40 –113 | 5–192 | 10–45 | 0–15 | 178–242c |
| Hands-on time mid-point (minutes) | 76.50 | 98.50 | 27.50 | 7.50 | 210.00 |
| Cost per sample range (£.p) | 10.31–34.51 | 1.92–78.71 | 7.05–33.30 | 0.00–3.24 | 73–96c |
| Median Cost per sample (£.p)b | 22.41 | 40.32 | 20.18 | 1.62 | 84.53 |
a Includes superannuation and national insurance
b Cost per sample does not always equal cost per hour multiplied by time spent on one test due to batching
c The time ranges are based on several different labs, hence the ‘minimums’ are not all referring to the same lab, nor are all the ‘maximums’. The lab with the shortest process, for example, used 113 min of MTO time, 5 min of Clinical Scientist time, 45 min of Consultant Grade Scientist time, and 15 min of Secretarial time, making 178 min in total. The cost per sample range is calculated in a similar manner
Array CGH cost breakdown
| Stagea | Cost |
|---|---|
| Sample reception and initial processing | £45 |
| Digestion/Reference Sample Processing | £15 |
| Cleaning | £4 |
| Labelling | £78 |
| Arrays, plus preparation and washing b | £188 |
| Scanning | £14 |
| Analysis and report writing | £24 |
| General resources (e.g. PC and printer) | £1 |
| Overheads | £73 |
| Total c | £442 |
a Cost of obtaining blood sample not included
b Cost of array: £500 for four patients, £125 each
c Baseline of 25 tests per week (1,150 per annum)
Karyotyping cost breakdown
| Stagea | Cost | Range |
|---|---|---|
| Sample reception and initial processing | £4.53 | £4.48–£4.58 |
| Media preparation/setting up culture | £2.39 | £1.62–£3.16 |
| Synchronisation/harvesting culture | £3.81 | £2.93–£4.69 |
| Slide-making | £1.93 | £1.05–£2.81 |
| Banding | £3.36 | £2.28–£4.45 |
| Analysis and checking | £47.11 | £39.15–£55.08 |
| Reporting results and authorisation | £29.39 | £27.94–£30.84 |
| Clinical liaison | £1.27 | £0.37–£2.18 |
| General resources (e.g. PC and printer) | £2.00 | £2.00–£2.00 |
| Overheads | £21.29 | £21.28–£21.30 |
| Total b | £117 | £103–£131 |
a Cost of obtaining blood sample not included
b Baseline of 61 tests per week (2,800 per annum)
Karyotyping––Cost of reporting different scenarios
| Scenarioa | Cost of Karyotypingb | Cost of Multi-telomere MLPAb | Cost of Multi-telomere FISHb | Cost of Targeted telomere FISHb | Total costa |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 No genome imbalance found. |
| – | – | – |
|
| 2 Genome imbalance found of |
| – | – | – |
|
| 3 Genome imbalance found of |
| – | – | – |
|
| 4 No genome imbalance found. |
|
| – | – |
|
| 5 No genome imbalance found. |
| – |
| – |
|
| 6 No genome imbalance found. |
|
| – |
|
|
| 7 No genome imbalance found. |
| – |
|
|
|
a Scenarios 1–3: stand-alone karyotyping. Scenarios 4–7: karyotyping plus multi-telomere testing approach (FISH or MLPA)
b Cost ranges given in parentheses
The cost of a single telomere test (£110) is significantly more than testing the same telomere again (£52) due to the initial cost of growing glycerols and preparing the probe ‘in house’.
aCGH–Cost of different reporting scenarios
| Scenarioa | Cost of patient aCGH test | Cost of Targeted FISH test | Cost of MLPA test | Cost of 2 parental aCGH testsb | Total cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 No genome imbalance found; only known benign variants/polymorphisms | £446 | – | – | – |
|
| 2 Genome imbalance (deletion or duplication) found of | £446 | – | – | – |
|
| 3 Genome imbalance (deletion or duplication) found of | £458 | £214 c | – | – |
|
| 4 Genome imbalance (duplication only) found of | £458 | £110 | £245d | – |
|
| 5 Genome imbalance (duplication only) found of | £458 | £110 | £290d | – |
|
| 6 Genome imbalance (deletion or duplication) found of | £442 | – | – | £790 |
|
| 7 Genome imbalance (deletion or duplication) found of | £458 | £110 | – | £790 |
|
a Scenarios 1 and 2 give the cost for a single patient sample only; the remaining scenarios account for the testing of both a patient and their two parents by aCGH, targeted FISH or MLPA
b The cost of testing each parent sample is slightly less than the cost of testing the patient sample, since some of the preliminary work and therefore a proportion of the cost is contained within the patient test cost
c Three FISH tests in total; the cost of testing a single sample (£110) is significantly more than testing each additional sample (£52) due to the initial cost of growing glycerols and preparing the probe ‘in house’
d The cost of testing a single sample (£200) is significantly more than testing each additional sample (£45) due to the initial cost of designing and purchasing targeted MLPA probe sets
Cost comparison of aCGH and karyotyping per sample
| Cost category | ACGH | Karyotyping | Cost difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Staff | £42 | £85 | −£43 |
| Equipment | £15 | £3 | +£12 |
| Consumables | £275 | £6 | +£269 |
| Overheads | £74 | £21 | +£53 |
| Other costs | £36 | £2 | +£34 |
| Total | £442 | £117 | £325 |
Fig. 4Flowchart example of the testing pathways, predicted number of diagnoses and associated cost implications of testing the same 100 ILD genetics clinic referrals for genome imbalance via the routine karyotyping route (factoring in FISH and MLPA based telomere tests, for karyotypically normal samples) and via the aCGH route. The numbers of diagnoses expected via the karyotyping and aCGH routes and the testing scenarios are derived directly from published data, clinical diagnostic laboratory records and our own research experience. The aCGH route is expected to yield 10–15% more diagnoses than the karyotyping and multi-telomere testing route. The costings given in the flowchart are based on the conservative estimate of 10% more diagnoses, but an overall cost per diagnosis is calculated both for 10% and 15% more diagnostic yields