| Literature DB >> 23253780 |
Maunank Shah1, Kathryn Miele, Howard Choi, Danielle DiPietro, Maria Martins-Evora, Vincent Marsiglia, Susan Dorman.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The tuberculin skin test (TST) has limitations for latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) diagnosis in low-prevalence settings. Previously, all TST-positive individuals referred from the community to Baltimore City Health Department (BCHD) were offered LTBI treatment, after active TB was excluded. In 2010, BCHD introduced adjunctive QuantiFERON-TB Gold In-Tube (QFT-GIT) testing for TST-positive referrals. We evaluated costs and cost-effectiveness of this new diagnostic algorithm.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23253780 PMCID: PMC3546858 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2334-12-360
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Figure 1Schematic of Decision Analysis Model for Cost-Effectiveness Evaluation. Simplified schematic of decision-analysis model. Target population consists of TST-positive referrals to BCHD. LTBI prevalence among this population was estimated based on QFT-GIT positivity rates at BCHD. The model incorporates US and foreign-born to account for different LTBI prevalence in these two populations. In the Standard Algorithm, all individuals are offered LTBI treatment. In the QFT-GIT Algorithm, all individuals receive QFT-GIT and only those that are positive are provided LTBI treatment. LTBI treatment completion rates are based on current BCHD data. Individuals with incomplete treatment were considered to have only partial treatment efficacy. It is assumed that individuals without LTBI were unable to progress to active TB disease.
Key Parameters for Cost-Effectiveness Analysis
| | | | | |
| Lifetime LTBI progression to active TB | 5% | 1% | 15% | [ |
| Percent of LTBI referrals that are foreign-born | 64% | 30% | 100% | [ |
| Percent of QFT-GIT positivity in BCHD | 57% FB; 36% US | -- | -- | BCHD,
[ |
| Prevalence of LTBI in TST-positive referrals | 70% FB; 43% US | 0% | 100% | Calculated;
[ |
| Sensitivity of QFT-GIT | 81% | 36% | 100% | [ |
| Specificity of QFT-GIT | 99% | 90% | 100% | [ |
| Percent of LTBI patients treated with 4Rif | 62% | 0% | 100% | BCHD |
| LTBI treatment completion for 9INH (4Rif) | 52% (73%) | 25% | 100% | BCHD,
[ |
| Drug-induced liver injury (percent severe) | 1% (0.002%) | 0% | 6% | BCHD,
[ |
| Efficacy of LTBI treatment medications | 0.9 | 0.50 | 1 | [ |
| 2012 US$ | | | | |
| QFT-GIT tubes | $7.10/test | $6.60 | $12.42 | BCHD |
| Phlebotomy supplies and clinic supplies | $2.18 | $0.55 | $3.82 | BCHD |
| QFT-GIT kit | $23.92/test* | $9.90* | $71.75* | BCHD |
| QFT-GIT lab consumables | $3.50/test | $.87 | $6.12 | BCHD |
| Total equipment costs for QFT-GIT testing†† | $1.14/test | $.29 | $1.99 | BCHD |
| Phlebotomist labor for QFT-GIT | $1.60/test | $1.60 | $3.99 | BCHD |
| Laboratory labor for QFT-GIT | $2.28/test | $1.48 | $2.52 | BCHD |
| Overhead for QFT-GIT testing | $0.53/sample | $0.25 | $2.50 | BCHD |
| | | | | |
| Initial LTBI evaluation labor | $35.04 | $15.88 | $68.29 | BCHD |
| Labor LTBI treatment: 9INH | $88.56 | $36.40† | $171† | BCHD |
| Labor LTBI treatment: 4Rif | $44.28 | $18.20† | $85.70† | BCHD |
| Drug costs 9INH | $26.82/course | $9.27 | $91.35 | BCHD |
| Drug costs 4Rif | $102.12/course | $102.12 | $482.60 | BCHD |
| Chest x-ray | $100 | $50 | $175 | BCHD |
| Mild hepatitis | $41.62 | $0 | $344 | BCHD,
[ |
| Severe hepatitis | $124.86 | $41.62 | $23,818 | BCHD,
[ |
| Cost of active TB (includes drugs, staff, labs) | $8,568 | $2,142 | $64,195 | BCHD,
[ |
| | | | | |
| Well | 1 | | | [ |
| 9INH treatment | 0.95 | .9 | .99 | [ |
| 4Rif treatment | 0.99 | .9 | .99 | [ |
| Mild hepatitis | 0.85 | 1 mo | 12 mo | [ |
| Severe hepatitis | 0.40 | 0.1 | 0.4 | [ |
| Active TB ** | 0.85 | 0.5 | 0.9 | [ |
| Fatal TB ** | 0.5 | 0.1 | 0.5 | [ |
| Death | 0 | [ |
Note. LTBI = latent tuberculosis infection; TB = tuberculosis; QFT-GIT = QuantiFERON-TB Gold In-Tube; TST = tuberculin skin test; 4Rif = 4-month regimen of Rifampin; 9INH = 9-month regimen of Isoniazid; BCHD = Baltimore City Health Department records.
* The base-case assumes a batch size of 24 patient samples per run. Low and high estimates are based on batch sizes ranging from 8 to 58 patient samples per run.
† Low and high estimates based on variable staff salary and time spent per appointment.
†† Includes costs for an Automated ELISA instrument, software, incubator, centrifuge, and other non-consumable laboratory equipment.
**Sensitivity analyses incorporated range of utility weights, along with low and high estimates for life-expectancy after TB disease, and low and high estimates of TB related mortality.
Costs and Effects of Intervention Compared to Standard Algorithm in the Base-Case
| | | | |
| | | | |
| QFT-GIT testing costs | $0.00 | $43.51 | $43.51 |
| LTBI treatment and monitoring | $275.39 | $208.99 | -$66.40 |
| Total LTBI-care costs | $275.39 | $252.50 | -$22.89 |
| Active TB costs per individual* | $84.54 | $117.54 | $33.00 |
| Net costs per individual | $359.93 | $370.04 | $10.12 |
| | | | |
| QALYs** | 25.21 per referral | 25.22 per referral | 0.01 QALYs gained per referral |
| Active TB | 9.9 per 1000 referrals | 13.7 per 1000 referrals | 3.8 per 1000 referrals |
| | | | |
| -- | -- | $1,202 per QALY-gained† |
Note. QFT-GIT = QuantiFERON-TB Gold In-Tube; LTBI = latent tuberculosis infection; TB = tuberculosis; BCHD = Baltimore City Health Department; QALYs = Quality-Adjusted Life Years.
*Active TB costs attributable to individuals referred to the BCHD TB Control Program who go on to develop active TB disease later in life; future costs were discounted at 3%.
**Future QALY’s were discounted at 3%.
†ICER calculated as incremental costs divided by incremental effects ($10.12/0.01QALY’s gained).
Health Department Costs and Budgetary Impact Per Year (500 Referrals)
| Referrals per year | 500 | 500 | |
| Total QFT-GIT testing costs per year | $0.00 | $21755.00 | $21755.00 |
| Total LTBI treatment and monitoring costs per year | $137695.00 | $104495.00 | -$33200.00 |
| Total LTBI-care costs per year | $137695.00 | $126250.00 | -$11445.00 |
| Total active TB costs per year* | $42270.00 | $58770.00 | $16500.00 |
| Net costs | $179965.00 | $185020.00 | $5060.00 |
*Active TB costs attributable to individuals referred to the BCHD TB Control Program who go on to develop active TB disease later in life using a 5 year analytic time horizon; future costs were discounted at 3%. Without discounting, the costs would be $49,005 and $68,135 for the Standard and QFT-GIT strategies, respectively.
Figure 2One-Way Sensitivity-Analysis of Key Model Parameters. Line represents incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) when using base-case estimates of all parameters. Not all parameters tested in sensitivity-analysis are shown. Top 12 factors affecting ICER are shown. EV-expected value of the ICER under base-case parameters.
Figure 3Two-Way Sensitivity-Analysis of QFT-GIT Sensitivity and LTBI Prevalence. Blue represents parameters at which Standard Algorithm is preferred option and red represents parameters at which QFT-GIT Algorithm is the preferred option given willingness to pay threshold (WTP): A) Two-way sensitivity analysis of LTBI prevalence versus QFT-GIT sensitivity at WTP threshold of $0 per QALY-gained; B) Two-way sensitivity analysis of LTBI prevalence versus QFT-GIT sensitivity at WTP threshold of $50,000 per QALY-gained.
Figure 4Results from a Probabalistic Sensitivity-Analysis using Monte Carlo Simulation Methods.A) Cost-effectiveness acceptability curve showing probability that the intervention will be cost-effective compared to treating all TST-positive referrals at varying willingness-to-pay thresholds. B) Incremental cost-effectiveness of QFT-GIT vs. Standard Algorithm during iterations of Monte Carlo Simulation. Ellipse represents 95% confidence points. Diagonal dashed line represents ICERs at a WTP threshold of $50,000. Points to the right of this dashed line are considered cost-effective. Dotted horizontal line shows incremental cost of $0.