| Literature DB >> 20948954 |
Sanjib Saha1, Ulf-G Gerdtham, Pia Johansson.
Abstract
Lifestyle interventions (i.e., diet and/or physical activity) are effective in delaying or preventing the onset of diabetes and cardiovascular disease. However, policymakers must know the cost-effectiveness of such interventions before implementing them at the large-scale population level. This review discusses various issues (e.g., characteristics, modeling, and long-term effectiveness) in the economic evaluation of lifestyle interventions for the primary and secondary prevention of diabetes and cardiovascular disease. The diverse nature of lifestyle interventions, i.e., type of intervention, means of provision, target groups, setting, and methodology, are the main obstacles to comparing evaluation results. However, most lifestyle interventions are among the intervention options usually regarded as cost-effective. Diabetes prevention programs, such as interventions starting with targeted or universal screening, childhood obesity prevention, and community-based interventions, have reported favorable cost-effectiveness ratios.Entities:
Keywords: Markov model; cardiovascular disease; cost-effectiveness; diabetes; economic evaluation; lifestyle interventions; long-term effectiveness; primary prevention; secondary prevention
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20948954 PMCID: PMC2954575 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph7083150
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1.Flow chart for study selection for the review starting with the NHS EED database.
General characteristics of articles on DPP, DPS, and IDPP.
| Ackermann ’06 [ | DPP lifestyle intervention | Standard care | ≥25 y, BMI ≥ 24, IGT | USA, CUA | 3 years | Healthcare | QALY | Single study (DPP) | 1,288 US$/QALY | 2000, 3% | Univariate | DAM |
| Caro ’04 [ | Acarbose, intensive lifestyle intervention, metformin | No intervention | 40–70 y, BMI > 25, IGT | Canada, CEA | 5 years | Healthcare | Preventing diabetes, LYG | DPP, DPS, and for acarbose STOP-NIDDM trial | ICER Lifestyle intervention 749 | 2000, 5% | Univariate | DAM |
| DPP RG ’03 [ | DPP lifestyle intervention | Standard care | ≥25 y, BMI ≥ 24, IGT | USA, CUA | 3 years | Healthcare and societal | Per case of diabetes delayed/prevented, QALY | Single study (DPP) | 51,600 US$/QALY societal perspective | 2000, 3% | Univariate | No model |
| Eddy ’05 [ | DPP lifestyle intervention, no intervention initially then dietary advice, no intervention initially then DPP, metformin. | No intervention | Adult, BMI > 24, fasting plasma glucose 5.27–6.93 mmol/L | USA, CUA | 3 years | Healthcare and societal | QALY | DPP and literature review | 143,000 US$/QALY healthcare and 62,600 US$/QALY societal perspective for DPP lifestyle intervention | 2000, 3% | Univariate | Archimedes model |
| Galani ’07 [ | Lifestyle intervention (DPS) | Standard care | ≥25 y; overweight BMI 25–29.9, borderline BMI 30, moderate obese BMI > 30 | Switzerland, CEA, CUA | 3.2 years | Societal | LYG, QALY | Literature review | 64 CHF/QALY for females and 354 CHF/QALY for males in borderline group | 2006, 3% | Probabilistic | DAM |
| Galani ’08 [ | Lifestyle intervention (DPS) | Standard care | ≥25 y, overweight BMI 25–29.9, borderline BMI 30, moderate obese BMI > 30 | Switzerland, CUA | 3.2 years | Societal | QALY | Literature review | ICER 4,358 CHF/QALY (females) and 2,189 CHF/QALY (males), 30 years old and overweight | 2006, 3% | Probabilistic | DAM |
| Herman ’05 [ | DPP lifestyle intervention | Standard care | ≥25 y, BMI ≥ 24, IGT | USA, CUA | 3 years | Healthcare and societal | QALY | Literature review | 1,100 US$/QALY healthcare and 8800 US$/QALY societal perspective | 2000, 3% | Univariate, probabilistic | DAM |
| Hoerger ’07 [ | Targeted screening (IGT & IFG positive) and either IGT or IFG positive + lifestyle | No screening | 45–74 y, BMI ≥ 25 | USA, CUA | until participants get diabetes | Healthcare | QALY | Literature review | 8,181 US$/QALY for (IGT + IFG) and 9,511 US$/QALY for (IGT/IFG) | 2001, 3% | Univariate | DAM |
| Icks ’07 [ | Targeted screening + lifestyle, targeted screening + metformin | No intervention | 60–74 y, BMI ≥ 24 | Germany, CEA | 3 years | Healthcare and societal | Incidence of T2DM avoided | DPP and literature review | 4,664 Euro healthcare and 27,015 Euro societal perspective per case T2DM avoided by lifestyle intervention | 2004, NP | Univariate, probabilistic | DAM |
| Lindgren ’07 [ | Lifestyle intervention (DPS) | No intervention | 60 y, BMI > 25, fasting glucose > 6.1 mmol/L | Sweden CUA | 3 years | Societal | LYG | Single study (DPS) | ICER 127,065 societal and 98,725 healthcare perspective with declining effect and 141,555 societal and 11,642 healthcare with remaining effect (SEK/LYG) | 2000, 3% | Univariate | DAM |
| Palmer ’04 [ | Intensive lifestyle advice, standard lifestyle advice + metformin | Standard lifestyle advice | ≥25 y, mean body weight 94.2, mean BMI 34 | Australia, UK, France, Germany, Switzerland, CEA | 3 years | Healthcare | LYG, years free of T2DM | DPP and literature review | Country specific; lifestyle and metformin were cost saving in all countries except UK | 2002, 5% (UK 6% cost, 1.5% effect) | Univariate | DAM |
| Ramachandran ’07 [ | Lifestyle intervention, metformin, lifestyle intervention + metformin | Standard lifestyle advice | 35–55 y, reproducible IGT | India, CEA | 3 years | Healthcare | Preventing one case of diabetes | Single study (IDPP) | Lifestyle intervention 1,052 US$, lifestyle + metformin 1,359 US$ per case of diabetes prevented | 2006, NP | Univariate | No model |
General characteristics of articles on combined drug and lifestyle intervention.
| Ara ’07 [ | Sibutramine + diet and lifestyle | Diet and lifestyle | 20–75+ y, BMI ≥ 30 | Finland,Germany, UK, Switzerland, CUA | 1 year | 5 years | 5 years | Healthcare | QALY | Literature review | 2,149 for Finland, 13,707 for Germany, 10,734 for Switzerland, 11,811 for UK (€/QALY) | 2004, 5%, UK (3.5%) | Univariate | DAM |
| Brennan ’06 [ | Sibutramine + diet and lifestyle advice | Diet and lifestyle | >40 y, overweight | Germany, CUA | 1 year | 5 years | 5 years | Healthcare | QALY | Literature review | 13,706 €/QALY | 2003, 5% | Univariate | DAM |
| Gillies ’08 [ | Screening for T2DM, screening + lifestyle intervention, screening + drug | No screening | 25/45–75 y, BMI > 25, other diabetic risk | UK, CUA | - | - | 50 years | Healthcare | QALY | Literature review | 14,150 for screening, 6,242 for screening + lifestyle, 7,023 for screening + drug (£/QALY) | 2006, 3.50% | Univariate, probabilistic | DAM |
| Hampp ’08 [ | Lifestyle intervention, lifestyle intervention + rimonabant | No treatment | ≥18 y, BMI > 27 or 30 | USA, CEA, CUA | 1–2 years | - | 5 years | Healthcare | QALY | Three published clinical trials | 52,936 US$/QALY for 2 years rimonabant + lifestyle | 2006, 3% | Univariate, probabilistic | DAM |
| Iannazzo ’08 [ | Orlistat + lifestyle intervention | Lifestyle intervention | ≥35 y, BMI > 30 | Italy, CUA | 4 years | 6 years | 10 years | Societal | QALY | Single study (RCT) | ICER 75,300 €/QALY | Not mentioned, 4% | Probabilistic | DAM |
| Prosser ’00 [ | Low-cholesterol diet, statins | No intervention | 35–84 y, LDL ≥ 160 mg/dl | USA, CUA | - | - | 30 years | Societal | QALY | Literature review | ICER for diet ranged from 1,900 US$ to 500,000 US$/QALY and statins from 54,000 US$ to 1,400,000 US$ per QALY | 1997, 3% | Univariate | DAM |
| Roux ’06 [ | Diet, diet + pharmacotherapy, diet + exercise, diet + exercise + behavior modification | Standard care | 35 y, BMI ≥ 25 | USA, CEA, CUA | 6 months | 6 months | Lifetime | Healthcare | QALY | Literature review | 12,600 US$/QALY for diet + exercise + behavior modification | 2001, 3% | Univariate | DAM |
| van Baal ’08 [ | Low-calorie diet, orlistat + low-calorie diet | No treatment | 20–70 y, BMI ≥ 30 | Netherlands, CUA | 1 year | - | up to 80 years | Healthcare | QALY | Literature review | ICER 17,900 €/QALY for low-calorie diet and 58,800 €/QALY for orlistat + low-calorie diet | 2005, 1.5% to effect & 4.0% to cost | Univariate, probabilistic | DAM |
| Warren ’04 [ | Sibutramine + diet and lifestyle | Diet and lifestyle | 18–65 y, BMI 27–40 | UK and USA, CUA | 1 year | 5 years | 5 years | Healthcare | QALY | Literature review | ICER for sibutramine 4,780 £/QALY | 2000, 6% in UK and 3% in USA | Univariate | DAM |
Abbreviations: BMI, body mass index; BP, blood pressure; CBA, cost–benefit analysis; CCA, cost-consequence analysis; CEA, cost-effectiveness analysis; CHD, coronary heart disease; CHF, Swiss franc; CUA, cost–utility analysis; CVD, cardiovascular disease; DALY, disability-adjusted life years; DAM, decision analytic model; DPP, Diabetes Prevention Program; DPS, Diabetes Prevention Study; EE, Economic evaluation; GP, general practitioner; ICER, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; IDPP, Indian diabetes prevention program; IFG, impaired fasting glucose; IGT, impaired glucose tolerance; LDL, low-density lipoprotein; LYG, life years gained; NP, not performed; PA, Physical activity; QALY, quality-adjusted life years; RCT, Randomized controlled trial; SEK, Swedish krona; T2DM; Type 2 diabetes; y, years.
Characteristics of decision analytic model (DAM).
| Ackermann ’06 [ | Markov model (CDC) | Nephropathy, neuropathy, retinopathy, coronary heart disease and stroke | DPP participant | Lifetime | From DPP | Single study (DPP) | QALY | QWB |
| Ara ’07 [ | Decision tree | CHD, diabetes | Hypothetical | 5 years | CHD from Framingham and others from literature | SAT clinical trial and literature review | QALY | SF-36 |
| Bemelmans ’08 [ | Markov model (RIVM-CDM) | CHD, T2DM, certain cancers, low-back pain, arthritis | Entire Dutch population | Lifetime | Age, body weight, physical activity, disease state, risk factor classes | Two studies from Netherlands | QALY/LYG | Not clear |
| Booth ’07 [ | Markov model | 11 states: BPG0, BPG1, BPG2, BPG3, CHD, CVE, CHD&CVE, CVE&CHD, CHD death, other death, CVE death | Representative Finnish population | 10–40 years | Framingham | National Health Examination Survey | LYG, QALY | 15D |
| Brennan ’06 [ | Decision tree | CHD, Diabetes | Hypothetical German population of 1,000 | 5 years | Framingham | Literature review | QALY | SF-36 |
| Brown ’07 [ | Life table approach | Hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, T2DM, CVD, stroke | Single study population | 24 years | Life table Framingham model | Single study (CATCH) | QALY | Not clear |
| Caro ’04 [ | Markov model | IGT, NGT, T2DM, death | Hypothetical population of 1,000 | 10 years | Literature review | DPP, DPS and STOP-NIDDM for acarbose | LYG | - |
| Colagiuri ’08 [ | Decision tree | 15 health states | Entire Australian population aged 45–74 | 10 years (2000–2010) | Not clear | DPP, DPS and UKPDS | DALY | - |
| Dalziel ’07 [ | 4 Markov models | 1. Cardiac model: free of further events, minor events, AMI, major events, stroke, and death; 2. Diabetes model: DM, IGT, NGT, death; 3.Fruit & vegetable model: Success, failure, death. 4. BMI model: Normal, overweight, obese, and death | Entire Australian population | 20 years (5 years for 2 studies) | - | Literature review | QALY | SF-36, EQ 5D, AqoL, Time tradeoff |
| Dalziel ’06 [ | Markov model | 3 states: physically active, physically inactive, and dead | Hypothetical cohort (matched with trial population) | Lifetime | Literature review | Single study | QALY | SF-36 |
| Eddy ’05 [ | Archimedes model | Diabetes, hypertension, asthma, CHF, retinopathy, stroke, nephropathy, neuropathy, death | Hypothetical population (matched with DPP) | 5–30 years | - | Literature review | QALY | QWB-SA |
| Galani ’08 [ | Markov model | Overweight, hypertension, diabetes, hypercholesterolemia, stroke, CHD | Hypothetical Swiss population of 10,000 | 65 years (25–85) | Framingham | DPS | QALY & LYG | Not clear |
| Galani ’07 [ | Markov model | Overweight, hypertension, diabetes, hypercholesterolemia, stroke, CHD | Hypothetical Swiss population of 10,000 | Lifetime | Framingham | DPS | QALY | Not clear |
| Gillies ’08 [ | Markov model and decision tree | 7 states: NGT, IGT diagnosed, IGT undiagnosed, T2DM (screening detected, clinically detected, undiagnosed) | Hypothetical population starting age 40 | 50 years | Literature review | Literature review | QALY | EQ 5D |
| Hampp ’08 [ | Decision tree | CHD & diabetes, only CHD, only diabetes, no CHD, and no diabetes | Hypothetical population | 5 years | Three published clinical trials | QALY | Literature, VAS, TTO | |
| Herman ’05 [ | Markov model (CDC) | Nephropathy, neuropathy, retinopathy, CHD, and stroke | Hypothetical population | Lifetime | CDC model risk factors | Literature review | QALY | QWB-SA |
| Hoerger ’07 [ | Markov model (CDC) | Three modules: screening, prediabetes, and diabetes | Hypothetical population | Up to 75 Years | CDC model risk factors | Literature review | QALY | QWB-SA |
| Iannazzo ’08 [ | Markov model | 3 states: obese without diabetes, obese with diabetes, and death | Hypothetical Italian population | 10 years | Framingham | Single study (RCT) | QALY | Not clear |
| Icks ’07 [ | Decision tree | Screening, prediabetes, and diabetes | German population from KORA study | 3 years | - | DPP | incidence of diabetes avoided | - |
| Jacobs- van ’07 [ | Markov model (RIVM-CDM) | Diabetes, CVDs, cancers, musculoskeletal disease | Dutch population | Lifetime (70 years) | Literature review | Literature review | QALY | Not clear |
| Lindgren ’07 [ | Markov model | IGT, MI, stroke, MI 2nd y, stroke 2nd y, T2DM, death | A 60-year-old Swedish cohort | 6 years | DPS, UKPDS | DPS | QALY | EQ-5D |
| Lindgren ’03 [ | Markov model | 10 states: without CVD, 1st and 2nd y of UA, MI, UMI, angina, death | A 60-year-old Swedish cohort | Lifetime (60–109 years) | Framingham | Single study (RCT) | LYG | - |
| Palmer ’04 [ | Markov model | IGT, T2DM, deceased | Hypothetical population (matched with DPP) | Lifetime | DPP | DPP and literature review | LYG | - |
| Prosser ’00 [ | Markov model (CHD Policy Model) | 3 models at the same time (AP, MI, cardiac arrest, coronary revascularization) | Women and men 35–84 years | 30 years | HDL, LDL, age group, sex, smoking status, diastolic BP | Literature review | QALY | SF-36 |
| Roux ’06 [ | Markov model | AP, MI, cardiac arrest | Hypothetical 10,000 obese women | Lifetime | Framingham | Literature review | QALY, LYG | Not clear |
| Roux ’08 [ | Markov model (CDC MOVE model) | 10 health states, 4 levels of physical activity, CHD, ischemic stroke, T2DM, breast cancer, colon cancer | Hypothetical USA population | 40 years | - | Literature review | LYG, QALY | QWB-SA |
| Salkeld ’97 [ | Model (Johannesson et al) | CHD (MI, UMI, AP, coronary insufficiency, sudden death), stroke, non-CVD death | Hypothetical population | 1 year | Framingham | One Australian trial and literature review | QALY, LYS | TTO |
| Tice ’01 [ | Markov model (CHD Policy Model) | 3 models (AP, MI, cardiac arrest, coronary revascularization) | Entire US population | 10 years | Framingham | Literature review | QALY | TTO |
| van Baal ’08 [ | Markov model (RIVM-CDM) | CHD, stroke, diabetes, osteoarthritis, low back pain, some cancers | Entire Dutch population | 80 years | - | Literature review | QALY | Person tradeoff |
| Wang ’03 [ | Life table approach | - | Single trial population | 40 years | Literature review | Single trial (Planet Health) and others | QALY | Not clear |
| Warren ’ 04 [ | Decision tree | CHD, diabetes | Hypothetical 1000 population | 5 years | Framingham | Literature review | QALY | SF-36 |
Abbreviations: 15D, 15 dimensions; AMI, acute myocardial infarction; AP, angina pectoris; BP; blood pressure; BPG, blood pressure group; CDC, Centre for Disease Control and Prevention; CHD, coronary heart disease; CHF, coronary heart failure; CVE, cerebrovascular events; DPP, Diabetes Prevention Program; DPS, Diabetes Prevention Study; EQ-5D, Euro Qol 5 Dimension; HDL, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol; IGT, impaired glucose tolerance; LDL, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol; LYG, life years gained; MI, myocardial infarction; NGT, normal glucose tolerance; QALY, quality-adjusted life years; QWB, quality of well being scale; QWB-SA, quality of well being scale—self-administered; RIVM-CDM, RIVM chronic disease model; SF-36, Short Form 36; T2DM, type 2 diabetes mellitus; TTO, time tradeoff; UA, unstable angina; UKPDS, United Kingdom Prospective Diabetes Study; UMI, unrecognized myocardial infarction; VAS, visual analogue scale.
Uncertainty around long-term effectiveness of lifestyle interventions.
| Ackermann ’06 [ | Intervention and effects continued until patients developed disease or died | - | Univariate | Intervention will be only 50% effective | 1,288 US$/QALY | Not clear |
| Ara ’07 [ | Weight loss regained within 5 years of intervention | 1 year | Univariate | Higher and lower rate of weight regain | 2,149 €/QALY for Finland,13,707 €/QALY for Germany,10,734 €/QALY for Switzerland, 11,811 €/QALY for UK | 14% around the ICER for all countries |
| Bemelmans ’08 [ | Effect stops after intervention period | 1 year | Univariate | The effect varies 1–4 percentage points | 5,700 €/QALY | 5,600 €/QALY to 9,900 €/QALY |
| Brennan ’06 [ | Weight loss regained within 5 years of intervention | 1 year | Univariate | Weight regain equals upper and lower CI, Delay weight regain by 3 months and 6 months | 13,706 €/QALY | 15,747 and 11,830 for CI, 10,404 and 8,235 for 3 months’ and 6 months’ delay |
| Caro ’04 [ | Lifestyle intervention will be 58% effective | 5 years | Univariate | Lifestyle intervention will be 30% and 70% effective | ICER 749 CA$/LYG | 9,445 CA$/LYG for 30% and “dominant” for 70% |
| Colagiuri ’08 [ | The effect will persist as long as intervention continues | 10 years | Univariate | Complications reduced to half | 50,000 AU$/DALY | Approx. 86,000 AU$/DALY |
| Dalziel ’06 [ | Effect returns to baseline at 4 years | 3 weeks to 2 years | Univariate, probabilistic | Intervention effect returns to baseline at 1 years, 5 years, 10 years | 2,053 NZ$/QALY | 10,381 NZ$/QALY (for 1 year), 1,663 NZ$/QALY (for 5 years), 1,160 NZ$/QALY (for 10 years), At 10,000 NZ$ WTP, 97% chance of being cost-effective |
| Eddy ’05 [ | The effect will persist as long as the intervention continues | Univariate | 20% lower and 20% higher effect on QALY | 143,000 from healthcare and 62,600 from societal (US$/QALY) | 178,000 and 120,000 from healthcare, 78,000 and 52,000 from societal | |
| Finkelstein ’06 [ | Effect will persist until death | 1 year | Univariate | Effect will persist only 1 year | 4,400 US$/LYG | 44,500 US$/LYG |
| Galani ’07 [ | Weight loss maintained for 6 more years and 4 years to regain the weight. After 10 years the weight reaches the baseline | 3 years | Probabilistic | - | 64 CHF/QALY for female and - 354 CHF/QALY for male in borderline group | At 1,000 CHF WTP, 99% chance of being cost-effective |
| Galani ’08 [ | The weight loss and CVD risk reduction persist for 6 more years and 4 years to regain the weight. After 10 years the weight reaches the baseline | 3 years | Probabilistic | - | ICER 4,358 CHF/QALY (Female) and 2,189 CHF/QALY (Male) 30 years old and overweight | At 4000 CHF WTP lifestyle intervention has 45% (Female) and 75% (Male) chance of being cost-effective |
| Gillies ’08 [ | Intervention and effects persisted until patients died | - | Univariate, probabilistic | - | 6,242 £/QALY | At £20,000 WTP, 99% chance of being cost-effective |
| Hampp ’08 [ | Weight loss persists 1 year | 1–2 years | Univariate, probabilistic | Weight loss persists 0.5–3 years | 52,936 US$/QALY | 35,000 (0.5 years) and 62,000 (3 years). At US$ 50,000 WTP 40.2% chance of being cost-effective |
| Herman ’05 [ | Effect will persist until participants contract disease | - | Univariate, probabilistic | The effect will decline by 50% and 20% | 1,100 US$/QALY | 3,102 and 7,886 US$/QALY |
| Hoerger ’07 [ | Intervention continued until patients developed disease or died | - | Univariate | The risk reduction from DPP will decline by 20% each year | Strategy one,8,181 US$/QALY; Strategy two, 9,511 US$/QALY | Strategy one, 13,179 US$/QALY; Strategy two, 14,387 US$/QALY |
| Jacobs-van ’07 [ | Effect stops after intervention period | 5 years | Univariate | No sensitivity analysis in this issue | - | - |
| Lindgren ’07 [ | Effect stops after intervention period | 4 years | Univariate | Effect of intervention persists for 2 years | 2363 €/QALY | Dominant |
| Lindgren ’03 [ | Risk reduction effect will persist lifelong (109 y) or the effect will persist only 2 years | 6 months | Univariate | - | ICER 127,065 SEK/LYG with declining effect and 141,555 SEK/LYG with remaining effect | - |
| Palmer ’04 [ | The effect will persist as long as intervention continues | 3 years | Univariate | The effect will persist lifelong | 24.56 year improved life expectancy | 25.21 year improved life expectancy |
| Roux ’06 [ | Long-term maintenance will be 20% | Univariate | Long-term maintenance will be ≤10% and >40% | 12,600 US$/QALY | 50,000 for 10% and 6,000 for 40% maintenance US$/QALY | |
| Roux ’08 [ | 33% to 50% decline of benefit after intervention | 12 months | Univariate, probabilistic | - | ICER 14,286 to 68,557 US$/QALY | At 200,000 WTP, 100% chance of being cost-effective |
| Salkeld ’97 [ | Effect stops after intervention period. | 1 years | Univariate | Effect will persist 1 year more in high-risk group | ICER 152,128 AU$/QALY for males | ICER 6,589 AU$/QALY |
| van Baal ’08 [ | 23% of the weight loss achieved after 1 year will be maintained in the long run | 1 year | Univariate, probabilistic | 50% and 100% weight-loss maintenance in both interventions | ICER 17,900 €/QALY for low-calorie diet and 58,800 €/QALY for orlistat + low-calorie diet | ICER range 8,100–17,800 €/QALY for low-calorie diet and 24,100–18,700 €/QALY for low-calorie diet + orlistat |
| Warren ’04 [ | The weight regain to baseline will completed within 50 months for participants and 18 months for placebo group | 1 year | Univariate, multivariate | Weight regain equals upper and lower CI | ICER 4,780 £/QALY | 4,828 £/QALY and 4,731£/QALY |
Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; ICER, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; LYG, life years gained; QALY, quality-adjusted life years; WTP, willingness to pay; y, years.
General characteristics of articles on physical activity (PA).
| Dalziel ’06 [ | Prescription-based PA counseling by GP | Standard care | 40–79 y, not active | New Zealand, CUA | 3 weeks to 2 years | - | Healthcare | Number of participants became active, QALY | Single study (RCT) | ICER 2,053 NZ$/QALY | 2001, 5% | Univariate, probabilistic | DAM |
| Munro ’04 [ | Twice weekly physical exercise | No intervention | ≥65 y, not active | UK, CUA | 2 years | - | Healthcare | QALY | Single study | ICER 17,174 €/QALY | 2003/2004, NP | Not clear | No model |
| Roux ’08 [ | Promotion of PA | No intervention | 25–64 y | USA, CUA,CEA | - | - | Societal | QALY | From 7 trials and the literature | ICER 14,286 to 68,557 US$/QALY | 2003, 3% | Univariate, probabilistic | DAM |
| Sevick ’00 [ | Lifestyle PA (behavioral skill training to increase PA) | Structured PA (prescription, supervised, centre based) | 35–60 y, >140% ideal weight | USA, CCA | 6 months | 24 months | Healthcare | Several consequences for PA level and cardio-respiratory fitness | Single study | Lifestyle intervention is cost-effective | Not mentioned, 5% | Univariate | No model |
| Stevens ’98 [ | Prescription-based PA | No prescription | 45–74 y, Not active | UK, CEA, CCA | 10 weeks | 8 months | Healthcare | Moving a person from sedentary to physically active level | Single study (RCT) | 2,500 £/person moving from inactive | Not mentioned, NP | Univariate | No Model |
| Sims ’04 [ | Exercise counseling by GP | Standard care | 20–75 y, not active | Australia, CEA | 1 year | - | Healthcare | DALY saved and percentage of patients become active | Single study (RCT) | 138 AU$/patients become active, 3,647 AU$/DALY | 1996, NP | Univariate | No model |
General characteristics of articles on dietary interventions.
| Cox ’03 [ | Face-to-face food behavior changing session | Self-administered video lesson | 15–52 y, low income | USA, CEA | 3 months | Not mentioned | A behavior checklist and intake of various nutrients | Single study | Video lesson was less costly 4,820 (US$) than face-to-face lesson 13,463 (US$) | Not mentioned | Not clear | No model |
| Dalziel ’07 [ | 10 nutritional interventions | Details of all comparators not provided | - | Australia, CEA, CUA | 12 months | Societal | QALY | Literature review | Mediterranean diet 1,020, intensive lifestyle intervention 1,880, media campaign for 2 fruits & 5 vegetables 46, media campaign for fighting fit, fighting fat 5,600 (AU$/QALY) | 2003, 5% | Univariate | DAM |
| Joffers ’07 [ | Reduction in dietary sodium consumption | Standard care | - | Canada, CEA | 1 year | Not mentioned | Decrease in hypertension prevalence, cost savings | Literature review | 430 million CA$/year | Not clear, NP | NP | No model |
| Panagiotakos ’07 [ | People having diet close to Mediterranean diet | People having traditional diet | Adults | Greece, CEA | - | Not mentioned | Time free of the development of CHD and life years lost | Single study (RCT) | ICER 50,989 Euro for additive healthcare cost due to non-Mediterranean diet for each year lost | Not mentioned | NP | No model |
| Tice ’01 [ | Grain fortification with folic acid and also vitamin supplementation | No fortification | 35–65 y | USA, CUA | - | Healthcare | Reduction in CHD events, medical cost savings and QALY saved | Literature review | For men ≥ 45 years, 300,000 QALYs and women >55 years, 140,000 QALYs will be saved in 10 years | 1997, 3% | Multivariate | DAM |
General characteristics of articles on diet + physical activity.
| Bemelmans ’08 [ | Lifestyle intervention, community-based approach, combined intervention | No intervention | 20–80 y, overweight for lifestyle | Netherlands, CEA, CUA | - | Healthcare | LYG and QALY | Two Dutch studies, QALY from literature | Lifestyle 7,400, Community-based approach 5,000, Combined program 5,700 (€/QALY) | 2004, 4% to cost and 1.5% to effect | Univariate | DAM |
| Booth ’07 [ | New antihypertensive, current care guidelines including lifestyle counseling | Previous guidelines | 40–74 y | Finland, CEA, CUA | - | Healthcare | LYG | National Health Examination Survey | New guidelines saved 498 million Euro and 49,000 LYG | 2001, 5% | Univariate | DAM |
| Brown ’07 [ | Dietary habits and physical activity changes in school curriculum | No intervention | 8–11 y, BMI ≥ 85th percentile | USA, CUA, CBA | 3 years | Societal | QALY, net benefit | Single study | 900 US$/QALY, Net benefit US$ 68,125 | 2004, 3% | Probabilistic | No model |
| Colagiuri ’08 [ | Screening and preventing diabetes by means of lifestyle activities | No intervention | 55–74 y and high risk 45– 54 y, obesity, hypertension, family history of diabetes | Australia, CUA | - | Not clear | DALY | Epidemiological data from Australia, DPP, DPS, UKPDS | 50,000 AU$/DALY | 2000, 3% | Univariate | DAM |
| Dzator ’04 [ | Information given by mail, mail + active participation | No intervention | Cohabiting couples | Australia, CEA, CCA | 4 months | - | Changes in 16 variables, e.g., consumption of fat, fiber, fruit, and vegetables; BMI, PA, physical fitness, LDL, BP | Single study (RCT) | 445.30 AU$/participant per unit change of outcome variable | Not mentioned | Univariate | No model |
| Finkelstein ’02 [ | CVD screening + enhanced lifestyle intervention | CVD screening + minimum lifestyle intervention | >50 y, low income | USA, CEA | 1 year | Healthcare | Percentage point decrease in 10-year probability of CHD | Single study | 637 US$/percentage point reduction in CHD risk via intensive lifestyle | Not mentioned, 3%, | NP | No model |
| Finkelstein ’06 [ | Screening, intervention including nutrition, physical activity, smoking cessation | No intervention | 40–64 y, low income, uninsured | USA, CEA | 1 year | Healthcare | Percentage point decrease in 10-year probability of CHD and LYG | Single study | 470 US$/percentage point reduction in CHD risk, 4400 US$/LYG | Not mentioned, 3% | Univariate | No model |
| Goldfield ’01 [ | Family-based behavioral treatment in group + individual basis | Group treatment only | 8–12 y, 20–100% overweight | USA, CEA | 12 months | Healthcare | Percentage overweight change for children and parents, reduction in Z-BMI | Single study (RCT) | Group treatment is more cost- effective | Not mentioned | Not clear | No model |
| Jacobs ’07 [ | Community intervention for total population, healthcare intervention for people at risk | No intervention | 20–80 y, 30–70 y, obese for intensive lifestyle | Netherlands, CUA | 5 years for community, 3 years for healthcare | Healthcare | QALY and number of participants need to treat to prevent one case of diabetes or CVD in 20 years | Literature review | 3,100–3,900 €/QALY for community intervention and 3,900–5,500 €/QALY for healthcare intervention | 2005, 4% to cost and 1.5% to effect | Univariate | DAM |
| Lindholm ’96 [ | Screening + advice on lifestyle changes | No intervention | 30–60 y, living in higher CVD mortality community | Sweden, CEA | 6 years | Societal | Change in serum cholesterol level, blood pressure, LYG | Single study | 1,100 to 4,050 £/LYG | 1992, 5% | Univariate | No model |
| Lindgren ’03 [ | Diet, exercise, diet + exercise | No intervention | 60 y, No CHD | Sweden, CEA | 6 months | Healthcare and societal | LYG | Single study | ICER 127,065 from societal and 98,725 from healthcare with declining effect and 141,555 from societal and 11,642 from healthcare with remaining effect (SEK/LYG) for diet | 2000, 3% | Univariate | DAM |
| Mcconnon ’07 [ | Use of website for changes in diet and physical activity | Routine information in primary care | >40 y, BMI > 31 | UK, CUA | 12 month | Not clear | Changes in weight and BMI, QALY | Single study (RCT) | ICER 39,248 £/QALY | Not mentioned | Probabilistic | No model |
| Salkeld ’97 [ | A video-based lifestyle change program, a video + self-help program | Standard care | 18–69 y, one or more CVD risk factor | Australia CEA, CUA | 12 months | Societal | LYG, QALY | One Australian trial and literature review | ICER 152,128 AU$/QALY for males in video + self help | 1994, 5% | Univariate | DAM |
| Wang ’03 [ | Dietary habits and physical activity changes in school curriculum | No intervention | 14 y, BMI ≥ 85th percentile | USA, CUA | 2 years | Societal | QALY, adulthood overweight prevented | Single study (RCT) and others | 4,305 US$/QALY | 1996, 3% | Univariate multivariate | DAM |