| Literature DB >> 24205255 |
Carmine Rossi1, Kevin Schwartzman, Olivia Oxlade, Marina B Klein, Chris Greenaway.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Immigrants have increased mortality from hepatocellular carcinoma as compared to the host populations, primarily due to undetected chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection. Despite this, there are no systematic programs in most immigrant-receiving countries to screen for chronic HBV infection and immigrants are not routinely offered HBV vaccination outside of the universal childhood vaccination program. METHODS ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24205255 PMCID: PMC3799697 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0078548
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Markov model for the natural history of hepatitis B infection.
Note: Every year individuals can transition to different health states (straight arrows) or can remain in their current health state. All health states can transition to an absorbing death state (not shown). Transitions occur annually until death. Immigrants enter the model based on their compliance with one of the interventions being offered.
Costs and quality-adjusted life years of hepatitis B strategies in a cohort of Canadian immigrants.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No intervention | 5,905 | 23.6250 | Reference | 5,429 | 21.7463 | Reference |
| Universal vaccination | 5,947 | 23.6249 | Dominated | 5,472 | 21.7462 | Dominated |
| Screen for prior immunity and vaccinate | 5,960 | 23.6249 | Dominated | 5,485 | 21.7462 | Dominated |
| Chronic HBV screening and treatment | 6,077 | 23.6292 | 40,880 | 5,599 | 21.7502 | 43,590 |
| Combined screening, treatment and vaccination | 6,101 | 23.6293 | 437,335 | 5,623 | 21.7503 | 243,400 |
Base-case was a 30-year old immigrant who was offered one of the screening and/or vaccination strategies or no intervention. Age-adjusted estimates were standardized to the age-distribution of new Canadian immigrants. Costs and QALYs discounted at a rate of 3% per year.
a The average cost and quality-adjusted life years realized by each individual in the cohort.
b Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio = difference in cost / difference in quality-adjusted life years gained.
HBV = hepatitis B virus.
QALYs = quality-adjusted life years.
Figure 2Cost-effectiveness plane comparing each interventions and the status quo for the base-case analysis.
The graph plots the average cost in Canadian dollars of the various strategies against the average quality-adjusted life years experienced by the hypothetical cohort. The slope between the points of the undominated strategies (filled shapes) corresponds to the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio.
Figure 3Change in the cost-effectiveness of the HBV screen and treat strategy by immigrant age group.
Figure 4Variation in the cost-effectiveness of the HBV screen and treat strategy by immigrant seroprevalence.
Note: The seroprevalence from a recent systematic review and meta-analysis is shown for the six major immigrant-source regions to Canada.
Figure 5Tornado diagram for one-way deterministic sensitivity analysis.
Figure 6Variation in the cost-effectiveness of the HBV screen and treat strategy by antiviral treatment cost and efficacy.