| Literature DB >> 22681855 |
Françoise F Hamers1, Catherine Rumeau-Pichon.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Five diseases are currently screened on dried blood spots in France through the national newborn screening programme. Tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) is a technology that is increasingly used to screen newborns for an increasing number of hereditary metabolic diseases. Medium chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency (MCADD) is among these diseases. We sought to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of introducing MCADD screening in France.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22681855 PMCID: PMC3464722 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2431-12-60
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pediatr ISSN: 1471-2431 Impact factor: 2.125
Figure 1Decision tree: Expansion of newborn screening to include MCADDcurrent newborn screening. The square represents a decision node, circles chance nodes, and triangles terminal nodes. The branch of the decision node “MCADD screening” is compared to “No MCADD screening” which is the current situation. Probabilities, costs, and QALY are calculated at each terminal node according to the parameters described in Table 1. To evaluate the concurrent cost-effectiveness of switching to MS/MS for PKU screening, the cost of the current technology to screen for PKU was subtracted from the cost of the MCADD screening test as described in the text.
Value of the parameters used in the MCADD newborn screening cost-effectiveness analysis model
| 1/15 000 | 1/10 000–1/25 000 | Expert judgement* | |
| Sensitivity | 1 | | [ |
| Specificity | 0.9998 | 0.9997 – 1 | [ |
| Death ≤ 72 hours of life | 0.02 | 0.02 – 0.05† | Expert judgement* |
| Metabolic crisis | 0.67 | 0.67 – 0.75 | [ |
| Death after a metabolic crisis | 0.20 | 0.10 – 0.30 | ‡[ |
| Severe sequelae§ | 0.05 | 0 – 0.05 | [ |
| Mild sequelae§ | 0.05 | 0 – 0.05 | [ |
| 0.75 | 0.50 – 0.75 | [ | |
| Normal | 81 | | French census |
| Death after metabolic crisis | 1.2 | | [ |
| Severe sequelae | 56 | | [ |
| Mild sequelae | 70 | | [ |
| Not affected by MCADD | 1 | 0.90 – 1 | See text |
| Mild sequelae | 0.89 | 0.89 – 0.92 | [ |
| Severe sequelae | 0.76 | 0.50 – 0.76 | [ |
| Screening test (€) (tests/lab/year)** | 3.75 (50 000) | 3.38 – 5.16 (60 000 – 30 000) | See text |
| Confirmatory test (€) | 500 | | See text |
| L-carnitine (€)†† | 6 065 | 0 – 12 130 | See text |
| Medical consultations (€)‡‡ | 888 | 888 – 1 264 | See text |
| Metabolic crisis (€) | 2 770 | 2 770 – 4 730 | Database |
| Severe sequelae§§ | 21 000 | 15 000 – 150 000 | Database |
| Mild sequelae§§ | 6 000 | 4 500 – 120 000 | Database |
*Expert judgment based on available literature, see text.
† Mortality within 24 hours of life is susceptible to be lower in the presence (2%) than in the absence (5%) of a screening programme because of better knowledge and awareness of the disease by clinicians.
‡ Point estimate produced by pooling available literature data.
§ Neurological sequelae after a metabolic crisis.
** The unit cost of the screening test depends on the annual number of tests per lab (shown in parentheses).
†† Cost of supplement in L-carnitine until the age of 18 shown, discounted. The proportion of patients treated is 50% in the base-case, ranging from 0% to 100% in the alternative scenarios.
‡‡ Cost of medical consultations discounted during the duration of life. The number of medical consultations per year in the absence of complication is two in the base-case analysis and five until the age of 6 then two during the remaining life in the alternative scenario.
§§ Annual cost includes special education and residential care. Lifetime costs were computed based on estimated life expectancies, see text.
Cost-effectiveness of the introduction of MCADD newborn screening in France
| Deaths averted | 5.47 | 5.47 |
| Mild neurological sequelae prevented | 1.37 | 1.37 |
| Severe neurological sequelae prevented | 1.37 | 1.37 |
| LY gained | 128 | 128 |
| QALY gained | 138 | 138 |
| Costs of testing alone† (€) | 3 187 660 | 1 742 702 |
| Net incremental costs of screening ‡(€) | 2 493 055 | 1 048 097 |
| € per LY gained | 19 478 | 8 189 |
| € per QALY gained | 18 033 | 7 581 |
* The cost of the current technology PKU screening test (€1.76) was subtracted from that of the MS/MS screening test. The incremental effectiveness was the same as that for the introduction of MCADD screening alone as it was assumed that the performance of MS/MS for PKU screening was similar to that of the current technology; see text.
† Includes the cost of screening and confirmation tests.
‡ Includes the cost of testing as well as the cost of follow-up and of management of diagnosed patients.
One-way sensitivity analyses of the cost-effectiveness of introducing MCADD screening and of switching to MS/MS technology for PKU screening
| Base-case values | | 7 581 |
| MCADD birth prevalence | 1/10 000 to 1/25 000 | 3 444 to 15 856 |
| MCADD screening test specificity | 0.9997 to 1 | 7 878 to 6 987 |
| Risk of developing a metabolic crisis | 0.75 | 5 881 |
| Risk of death within 72 hours of life | 0.05 | 5 902 |
| Risk of death after a metabolic crisis | 0.01 to 0.03 | 13 180 to 5 314 |
| Risk of mild neurological sequelae | 0 | 9 175 |
| Risk of severe neurological sequelae | 0 | 12 823 |
| Screening effectiveness (reduction in the risk of developing a metabolic crisis) | 0.5 | 14 351 |
| Utility of persons unaffected by MCADD | 0.9 | 8 769 |
| Utility of persons with severe neurological sequelae | 0.45 | 7 121 |
| Utility of persons with mild neurological sequelae | 0.92 | 7 632 |
| Cost of the MCADD screening test (€) | 3.38 to 5.16 | 5 384 to 15 655 |
| Annual cost of management of severe | 15 000 to 150 000 | 8 832 to −19 139* |
| Annual cost of management of mild neurological sequelae (€) | 4 500 to 120 000 | 7 911 to −17 353* |
| Cost of treatment of a metabolic crisis | 4 730 | 7 211 |
| % patients receiving L-carnitine supplementation until 18 years of age | 0% to 100% | 6 617 to 8 546 |
| Number of medical consultations per year until 6 years of age | 5 | 7 667 |
| | No discounting | −514* |
| Annual discounting rate | 3% to 6% | 4 954 to 13 598 |
* A negative cost-effectiveness ratio indicates that the strategy is both more effective and less costly than the comparison strategy.
Figure 2Sensitivity analyses: Expansion of newborn screening to include MCADDcurrent newborn screening. The width of the bar indicates the variation in the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio associated with alternative parameter values for that input. The numbers on the right side, next to the parameters, indicate the lower- and upper-bounds of the ranges used in sensitivity analyses.