| Literature DB >> 23016739 |
Amani Thomas Mori1, Bjarne Robberstad.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Due to escalating treatment costs, pharmacoeconomic analysis has been assigned a key role in the quest for increased efficiency in resource allocation for drug therapies in high-income countries. The extent to which pharmacoeconomic analysis is employed in the same role in low-income countries is less well established. This systematic review identifies and briefly describes pharmacoeconomic studies which have been conducted in Tanzania and further assesses their influence in the selection of essential medicines.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23016739 PMCID: PMC3472274 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6947-12-110
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ISSN: 1472-6947 Impact factor: 2.796
Figure 1Flow of information through the different phases of the systematic review.
Disease burden rank, pharmacoeconomic evidences and their main findings, implications and current listing status
| 1 | HIV/AIDS | HAART for PMTCT
[ | Highly cost-effective intervention with ICER of US$ 162 per DALY averted when compared to sd-NVP, however it is 40% more costly but 5 times more effective |
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| Sd-NVP for PMTCT
[ | |||
| 2 | Malaria | ALu for non-severe malaria
[ | A cost-effective drug which saves US$ 22.4 per case averted when compared to amodiaquine. (Listing status: ALu |
| SP for non-severe malaria
[ | |||
| SP for IPTi
[ | A cost-effective intervention with ICER of US$ 1.6-12.2 per DALY* averted. SP-IPTi reduces episodes of clinical malaria and anaemia by 30 and 21 percent in areas of moderate to high malaria transmissions, in the first year of life
[ | ||
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| 3 | Diarrhoeal diseases | Zinc as adjunct therapy
[ | A highly cost-effective intervention when combined with ORS with ICER of US$ 73 per DALY averted |
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| 4 | Injury/ Trauma | Tranexamic acid Inj for surgical bleeding and trauma patients
[ | A highly cost-effective intervention with ICER of US$ 93 and US$ 48 per life saved for surgical and trauma patients*. TXA reduces number of transfusions by one-third and volume of blood per transfusion by one unit in elective surgery
[ |
| 5 | ARI | None | None |
| 6 | TB | Short-course chemotherapy
[ | A highly cost-effective option with ICER of US$ 1–4 per LY saved. Short-course chemotherapy increases cure rate by 25% compared to the long regimens. |
| 7 | Prenatal conditions | None | None |
| 8 | Maternal deficiencies | None | None |
| 9 | Nutritional deficiencies | Iron+ Deltaprim to prevent anaemia and malaria in infants
[ | Considered to be a cost-effective intervention, support the evidence shown by SP-IPTi in reduction of both anaemia and malaria |
| 10 | CVD and Diabetes | Preventive cardiology
[ | Diuretics, Aspirin+Diuretic and Aspirin+Diuretic+β-blocker are very cost-effective with ICERS of US$ 85, 143 and 317 per DALYS averted. |
| 11 | Neoplasms | None | None |
| 12 | Immunisable diseases | Anti-Rabies vaccine
[ | A very cost-effective intervention with ICER of US$ of 27 and 32 per DALY* averted from provider and societal perspectives. |
* Compared to do nothing, ALu-artemether-lumefantrine, SP- sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine, Sd-Single dose, HAART-Highly active antiretroviral drugs, ORS-Oral rehydration salt, ARI-acute respiratory tract infections, CVD-cardiovascular diseases.
Study characteristics
| Guerriero et al.
[ | 2011 | Injury (Bleeding Trauma Patients) |
| Robberstad et al.
[ | 2010 | HIV/AIDS (Prevention of Mother-to-Child Transmissions) |
| Guerriero et al.
[ | 2010 | Surgical Bleeding |
| Hutton et al.
[ | 2009 | Malaria (Intermittent Prevention Therapy in Infants) |
| Shim et al.
[ | 2009 | Rabies vaccination |
| Robberstad et al.
[ | 2007 | Cardiovascular diseases |
| Wiseman et al.
[ | 2006 | Case management of non-severe malaria |
| Robberstad et al.
[ | 2004 | Diarrhoeal diseases |
| Sweat et al.
[ | 2004 | HIV/AIDS (Prevention of Mother-to-Child Transmissions) |
| Abdulla et al.
[ | 2000 | Case management of non-severe malaria |
| Gonzalez et al.
[ | 2000 | Malaria (Intermittent Prevention Therapy in Infants) |
| Murray et al.
[ | 1991 | Tuberculosis |