| Literature DB >> 20546629 |
Caroline O Laurence1, John R Moss, Nancy E Briggs, Justin J Beilby.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: While point of care testing (PoCT) for general practitioners is becoming increasingly popular, few studies have investigated whether it represents value for money. This study aims to assess the relative cost-effectiveness of PoCT in general practice (GP) compared to usual testing practice through a pathology laboratory.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20546629 PMCID: PMC2905350 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-10-165
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Summary characteristics of patients
| Characteristics Freq (%) | Intervention (n = 3010) | Control (n = 1958) | Total (n = 4968) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | Male | 1630 (54.2) | 1018 (52.0) | 2648 (53.3) |
| Age group (years) | 18-39 | 52 (1.7) | 21 (1.1) | 73 (1.5) |
| 40-49 | 199 (9.6) | 109 (5.6) | 308 (6.2) | |
| 50-59 | 573 (19.0) | 335 (17.1) | 908 (18.3) | |
| 60-69 | 1015 (33.7) | 604 (30.8) | 1619 (32.6) | |
| 70-79 | 867 (28.8) | 680 (34.7) | 1547 (31.1) | |
| 80+ | 304 (10.1) | 209 (10.7) | 513 (10.3) | |
| Age (years) median (IQ range) | 66.0 (59.0-74.0) | 68.0 (60.0-75.0) | 67.0 (59.0-75.0) | |
| Geographic region | Urban | 897 (29.8) | 840 (42.9) | 1737 (35.0) |
| Rural | 917 (30.5) | 447 (22.8) | 1364 (27.5) | |
| Remote | 1196 (39.7) | 671 (34.3) | 1867 (37.6) | |
| Condition* | Anticoagulant therapy | 572 (19.0) | 372 (19.0) | 944 (19.0) |
| Diabetes | 1182 (39.3) | 785 (40.1) | 1967 (39.6) | |
| Hyperlipidaemia | 2356 (78.3) | 1463 (74.7) | 3819 (76.9) |
*Patients could have more than one condition
Resource use items and unit costs for all tests
| Category of resource | Description | Source | Volume | Unit Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Establishment Program | PoCT equipment | Industry sources | Equivalent annual cost over clinically useful life (3 years) | |
| Device Training initial and refresher | Trial | Twice - at commencement of Trial and 12 months later | ||
| Accreditation | Trial | Annual | ||
| Pathology testing | Pathology tests - PoCT and laboratory testing* | Medicare Australia data | No. of tests claimed | 100% of MBS fee for PoCT. |
| Consultations - including where PoCT test ordered | Medicare Australia data | No. of consultations | Actual charge | |
| Copayments*** | Medicare Australia data | No. of consultations | Actual charge minus MBS fee rebate | |
| Device Operator time (test, notes etc) | Time and motion study of sample of practices | No. of tests claimed | SA Nurses Award - Registered Nurse 3rd year + oncosts | |
| Patient follow-up of test results (GP and nurse) | Time and motion study | No. of tests claimed | SA Nurses Award - Registered Nurse 3rd year + oncosts | |
| Patient Episode Initiation | Medicare Australia data | No.r of episodes claimed | 85% of schedule fee** | |
| Quality management | Quality Assurance Program | Industry source | Annual | |
| Quality control | Device Group | No. of QC tests (monthly) | ||
| Quality assurance | RCPA QAP Pty Ltd | No. of QA tests (monthly | ||
| Device Operator time for QA and QC | Time and motion study | Number of QA and QC tests | SA Nurses Award - Registered Nurse 3rd year + oncosts | |
| Consumables and maintenance | Consumables - per test items and periodically used items**** | Industry sources | Per test cost | |
| Annual maintenance fee | Nil. Manufacturers replaced defective devices at no cost. | |||
| Downstream costs | Hospital admissions (related only to disease group in study) | Case note audit on sample of patients | No. of visits | National Hospital Data Collection - Public Section Estimated Round 9 (2004-05) - AR-DRG 5.0***** |
| Emergency department visits | Patient satisfaction survey | No. of visits | National Hospital Data Collection - Public Section Estimated Round 9 (2004-05) - AR-DRG 5.0 | |
| Specialist referrals | Medicare Australia data | No. of referrals | MBS fee | |
| Allied health visits | Medicare Australia data | No. of referrals | MBS fee when referred by a GP | |
| Pharmaceutical costs | Medicare Australia data | No. of prescriptions for conditions associated with the test | PBS dispensed price and copayment | |
| Patient costs | Motor vehicle travel | Patient satisfaction survey | Distance (Km) | Australian Taxation Office |
| Other travel costs (eg bus, taxi) | Patient satisfaction survey | Mean cost | ||
| Time seeking healthcare (travel time, waiting time) | Patient satisfaction survey | Mean travel and waiting time | ABS seasonally adjusted average weekly earnings - applied whether were employed, unemployed or retired | |
* The effect of coning out of pathology was accounted for. Pathology providers can charge through the Medicare Benefits Schedule (MBS) fee only for the three most expensive tests ordered on the one occasion even when more tests are actually done. This is known as 'coning' and means that the tests recorded in the MBS data include only those charged for and not all that were done.
**87% of GP requested pathology is bulk-billed.
*** The high percentage of patients in the Trial who held health care cards or were pensioners (91%) and the location of practices in lower socio-economic status areas meant that most Medicare care items used in the Trial were bulked-billed so that patients did not make a copayment.
****Combined costs of items required to undertake each test. This included the testing strip/cassette, lancet, capillary tubes, plungers, urine pots, dipsticks and gloves. Periodically used items such as dust filters and cleaning kits were costed on an annual basis.
*****Hospitalisation rates were applied to a sample of patients obtained through the case note audit and weighted estimates generated for the Trial population to determine estimates for the whole sample. This approach was taken due to poor reporting of hospitalisations by practices. The hospitalisations were then assigned an AR-DRG code by a researcher blinded to the patient identification and their allocation to intervention or control under guidance from an expert AR-DRG coder. AR-DRG costs were adjusted by the CPI.
Comparison of costs (direct and indirect) at 18 months for HbA1c tests - costs per patient (Australian dollars, calendar year 2006)
| RESOURCES | INTERVENTION (PoCT) N = 1182 | CONTROL (Laboratory) N = 785 | DIFFERENCE (INTERVENTION - CONTROL) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Establishment costs in GP | $114 | $0* | $114 |
| Consumables & maintenance in GP | $28 ($22, $31) | $0* | $28 ($22, $31) |
| Quality assurance & control in GP | $29 | $0* | $29 |
| HbA1c tests (100% MBS fee in GP, 85% MBS fee in pathology laboratory) | $64 ($49, $65) | $98 ($88, $107) | -$34 (-$54, -$28) |
| | |||
| GP consultations | $579 ($515, $659) | $560 ($502, $618) | $18 (-$69, $112) |
| Hospital admissions | $171 (-$181, $662) | $506 (-$137, $1,241) | -$334 (-$1,131, $460) |
| Emergency Dept visits | $8 ($3, $13) | $8 ($2, $13) | -$1 (-$8, $7) |
| Specialist consultations | $173 ($163, $183) | $169 ($157, $180) | $4 (-$11, $20) |
| Allied health visits | $221 ($195, $253) | $232 ($188, $282) | -$11 (-$72, $47) |
| Pharmaceuticals | $2,249 ($1,889, $2,555) | $2,032 ($1,859, $2,586) | $217 (-$280, $253) |
| | |||
| Copayment for GP consultations and pharmaceuticals | $4 ($4, $6) | $4 ($2, $6) | $0 (-$2, $4) |
| Patient travel costs | $12 ($10, $14) | $28 ($23, $33) | -$16 (-$22, -$11) |
| | |||
| | |||
| | |||
Note: totals not exact due to rounding
* For the control group these items are included in the MBS fee for the laboratory
Point estimates of the incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICER) for PoC testing per patient maintained in the target range* compared with laboratory testing
| Test | Treatment Group | Costs per patient ($) | Effects per patient * | ICER ($) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| INR | Intervention (PoCT) | 3,298 | 0.5701 | |
| Control (Laboratory) | 3,150 | 0.6147 | ||
| Difference | 148 | -0.0446 | Dominated | |
| HbA1c | Intervention (PoCT) | 3,676 | 0.6548 | |
| Control (Laboratory) | 3672 | 0.5618 | ||
| Difference | 4 | 0.0930 | $40 | |
| ACR | Intervention (PoCT) | 1,727 | 0.7739 | |
| Control (Laboratory) | 1,954 | 0.7418 | ||
| Difference | -228 | 0.0321 | Dominant | |
| Lipids | Intervention (PoCT) | 2,732 | 0.1592 | |
| Control (Laboratory) | 2,202 | 0.1066 | ||
| Difference | 530 | 0.0526 | $10,082 | |
*Effect is the proportion of patients in target range as determined at the end of the Trial (18 months mean observation time)
One-way sensitivity analysis on the ICERs (as expressed in dollars per patient maintained in target range)
| Test | Selected variables | Cost per patient maintained in target range |
|---|---|---|
| INR | Base ICER | Dominated* |
| GP consultations - Upper 95% CI | Dominated* | |
| GP consultations - Lower 95% CI | Dominated* | |
| Hospital admissions - Upper 95% CI | Dominated* | |
| Hospital admissions - Lower 95% CI | SW Quadrant** | |
| HbA1c | Base ICER | $40 |
| GP consultations - Upper 95% CI | $1,049 | |
| GP consultations - Lower 95% CI | Dominant*** | |
| Hospital admissions - Upper 95% CI | $8,579 | |
| Hospital admissions - Lower 95% CI | Dominant*** | |
| ACR | Base ICER | Dominant*** |
| GP consultations - Upper 95% CI | Dominant*** | |
| GP consultations - Lower 95% CI | Dominant*** | |
| Hospital admissions - Upper 95% CI | $17,647 | |
| Hospital admissions - Lower 95% CI | Dominant*** | |
| Lipids | Base ICER | $10,082 |
| GP consultations - Upper 95% CI | $11,691 | |
| GP consultations - Lower 95% CI | $8,618 | |
| Hospital admissions - Upper 95% CI | $26,120 | |
| Hospital admissions - Lower 95% CI | Dominant*** | |
* Dominated: PoCT was more costly and less effective than laboratory testing
** SW Quadrant: PoCT was less costly and less effective than laboratory testing
***Dominant: PoCT was less costly and more effective than laboratory testing
Note: this analysis was undertaken on all the other variables (consumables, tests, emergency department visits, specialist consultations and pharmaceuticals) but did not have an influence on the ICERs ie change the quadrant.
Figure 1Joint probability distribution of the incremental costs and effects of PoCT for INR, HbA1c, ACR and Lipids.