| Literature DB >> 24485221 |
Martin C Gulliford, Nawaraj Bhattarai1, Judith Charlton, Caroline Rudisill.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A healthy diet is associated with reduced risk of diabetes, cardiovascular disease and cancer. The study aimed to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of a universal strategy to promote healthy diet through brief intervention in primary care.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24485221 PMCID: PMC4015683 DOI: 10.1186/1478-7547-12-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cost Eff Resour Alloc ISSN: 1478-7547
Summary of the modelled effect of intervention on incidence of study conditions
| 0.965 (0.961 to 0.968) | 0.964 (0.961 to 0.968) | |
| 0.959 (0.955 to 0.963) | 0.959 (0.955 to 0.963) | |
| 0.975 (0.972 to 0.978) | 0.975 (0.972 to 0.978) | |
| 0.997 (0.995 to 0.998) | 0.997 (0.995 to 0.998) | |
Figures represent the mean relative risk value (95% interval) for 2,000 simulations, based on the mean values across all ages in the first cycle.
Health outcomes and cost-effectiveness of a healthy eating intervention in a population of 262,704 healthy participants
| | ||
|---|---|---|
| Number entering intervention | 262,704 | |
| Life years lived without disease (per 1,000)a | 41.9 (-17.4 to 101.0) | 88.0 |
| New incidences per 1,000 of: | | |
| Diabetes mellitus | -0.5 (-2.2 to 1.23) | 67.7 |
| Coronary heart disease | -0.6 (-2.4 to 1.3) | 69.0 |
| Stroke | 0.02 (-1.5 to 1.6) | 49.7 |
| Colorectal cancer | 0.04 (-0.7 to 0.8) | 46.2 |
| Life years lived with physical morbidity (per 1,000)a | | |
| Single condition | -28.4 (-75.8 to 18.7) | 84.6 |
| Dual conditions | -7.2 (-28.9 to 14.4) | 71.0 |
| Triple conditions | -0.7 (-7.5 to 6.1) | 56.1 |
| Quadruple conditions | -0.0 (-1.4 to 1.5) | 52.2 |
| Life years lived with depression (per 1,000)a | -2.9 (-16.6 to 11.2) | 63.9 |
| Total life years (per 1,000)a | 5.7 (-36.6 to 47.3) | 41.1 |
| Total intervention costs (£ per 1,000) | 153,521 (153,462 to 153,583) | 100.0 |
| Incremental costs of non-intervention health care utilisation (£ per 1,000) | -13,765 (-93,093 to 66,556) | 38.8 |
| Incremental total costs (£ per 1,000)a,b | 139,755 (60,466 to 220,059) | 99.8 |
| Incremental QALYs (discounted 3.5%) (per 1,000) | 4.3 (-8.8 to 18.0) | 68.8 |
| Incremental QALYs (discounted 1.5%) (per 1,000) | 6.3 (-15.6 to 28.4) | 67.0 |
| Net health benefits (QALYs per 1,000)b,c | -0.32 (-13.8 to 13.5) | 47.9 |
| Probability cost effective | 47.9 | |
| At £30,000 per QALY (%) |
aper 1,000 healthy participants entering model; bdiscounted at 3.5%; cnet health benefit at a threshold of £30,000 per QALY.
Figures represent mean and 95% range of 2,000 simulations.
Effect of varying the unit cost of intervention
| | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Incremental QALYsa | 4.3 (-8.8 to 18.0) | 4.3 (-8.8 to 18.0) | 4.3 (-8.8 to 18.0) |
| Incremental costa | 16,939 | 139,755 | 293,276 |
| (-62,385 to 97,256) | (60,446 to 220,059) | (213,985 to 373,563) | |
| Net health benefita,b | 3.8 | -0.32 | -5.4 |
| (-9.7 to 17.6) | (-13.8 to 13.5) | (-18.9 to 8.4) | |
| Probability cost-effective | 66.7 | 47.9 | 25.6 |
discounted at 3.5%; bnet health benefit at a threshold of £30,000 per QALY.
Figures are expressed per 1,000 participants entering the model and represent mean and 95% range of 2,000 simulations.
Cost-effectiveness of dietary intervention in selected age-groups
| 30 years and over | 44.1 | 4.40 | 140,716 | -0.29 | 48.5 |
| (-21.0 to 105.7) | (-10.0 to 18.6) | (63,609 to 217,580) | (-14.5 to 13.6) | ||
| 30 to 74 years | 42.1 | 3.84 | 140,758 | -0.85 | 47.5 |
| (-23.3 to 107.0) | (-11.2 to 19.1) | (59,557 to 221,842) | (-16.4 to 14.1) | ||
| 40 years and over | 49.7 | 5.3 | 131,152 | 0.95 | 52.8 |
| (-15.8 to 117.6) | (-10.3 to 22.2) | (53,690 to 206,149) | (-14.8 to 17.2) | ||
| 40 to 74 years | 51.9 | 5.7 | 136,606 | 1.12 | 54.2 |
| (-16.3 to 127.7) | (-11.2 to 22.4) | (56,301 to 215,257) | (-16.0 to 17.8) | ||
| 50 years and over | 55.6 | 6.8 | 131,812 | 2.41 | 56.0 |
| (-11.7 to 126.5) | (-14.6 to 28.9) | (60,978 to 208,546) | (-18.6 to 24.6) | ||
| 50 to 74 years | 61.5 | 7.4 | 132,929 | 2.94 | 59.0 |
| (-21.0 to 146.2) | (-16.7 to 31.9) | (56,612 to 205,664) | (-21.3 to 26.4) |
adiscounted at 3.5%; bnet health benefit at a threshold of £30,000 per QALY.
Figures are expressed per 1,000 participants entering the model and represent the mean and 95% range of 1,000 simulations in each age group.
Figure 1Cost-effectiveness acceptability curves for dietary intervention targeted at selected age groups.