| Literature DB >> 25915616 |
Elisa Sicuri1, Silke Fernandes2, Eusebio Macete3, Raquel González4, Ghyslain Mombo-Ngoma5, Achille Massougbodgi6, Salim Abdulla7, August Kuwawenaruwa7, Abraham Katana8, Meghna Desai9, Michel Cot10, Michael Ramharter11, Peter Kremsner5, Laurence Slustker9, John Aponte4, Kara Hanson2, Clara Menéndez4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Intermittent preventive treatment in pregnancy (IPTp) with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP) is recommended in HIV-negative women to avert malaria, while this relies on cotrimoxazole prophylaxis (CTXp) in HIV-positive women. Alternative antimalarials are required in areas where parasite resistance to antifolate drugs is high. The cost-effectiveness of IPTp with alternative drugs is needed to inform policy.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25915616 PMCID: PMC4410941 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0125072
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Design of the Incremental economic evaluation.
HIV = Human Immunodeficiency Virus; LLITNs = Long-Lasting Insecticide Treated Nets; CTX = Cotrimoxazole; IPTp = Intermittent Preventive Treatment of malaria in pregnancy; SP = Sulphadoxine-Pyrimethamine; MQ = Mefloquine. The figure shows that for both Trials the cost of LLITNs was not considered in the economic evaluation performed as women in both arms were administered with this preventative tool. The same applies for CTX in Trial on HIV-positive women. IPTp-placebo in Trial on HIV-positive women was considered as “doing nothing” option with no costs associated. Incremental net costs were calculated, which included the incremental costs of the intervention minus treatment savings due to its efficacy.
Input variables of the threshold and cost-effectiveness analyses of IPTp-MQ compared with IPTp-SP in HIV-negative pregnant women.
| Values (range/CI95%) | Distribution | Estimated parameters | Source | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Time nurses take to provide 1 dose Sulfadoxine-Pyrimethamine (SP); minutes | 2.5 | Triangular symmetric | Min = 2; Max = 3 | Self reported by nurses |
| Time nurses take to provide 1 dose Mefloquine (MQ); minutes | 5.5 | Triangular symmetric | Min = 5; Max = 6 | Self reported by nurses |
| Nurses' monthly cost of labour; average including Gabon (US$) | 413.25 | Gamma | α = 11.52; β = 35.87 | Country MoH |
| Nurses' monthly cost of labour; average excluding Gabon (US$) | 336.73 | Gamma | α = 283.47; β = 1.19 | Country MoH |
| MQ (250mg) price per tablet (US$) | 0.5 | Triangular asymmetric | Min = 0.46; Max = 0.90 | (MMV + GF) |
| International SP (500 mg + 25 mg) price per tablet (US$) | 0.07 | Lognormal | μ = -2.66; σ = 0.04 | GF |
| Average number of tablets per dose MQ—includes drug wastage | 3.75 | Point estimate | - | [ |
| Average number of tablets per dose SP—includes drug wastage | 3.15 | Point estimate | - | Trial data |
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| Discount rate | 0.03 | Point estimate | - | Assumption |
| Average women's age (years) | 24.5 | Point estimate | [ | |
| Length Disability—malaria (years) | 0.01(0.005–0.02) | Gamma | α = 9.89; β = 0.001 | Experts opinion |
| Length Disability—anaemia malaria related (years) | 0.06 (0.04–0.11) | Gamma | α = 8.31; β = 0.007 | [ |
| Across country average life expectancy of women aged 24.5 years (in years, for the year 2011)—including Gabon | 46.51 | Point estimate | - | [ |
| Across country average life expectancy of women aged 24.5 years (in years, for the year 2011)—excluding Gabon | 45.63 | Point estimate | - | [ |
| Sensitivity analysis: life expectancy of Japanese women aged 24.5 (in years, for the year 2011) | 66.28 | Point estimate | - | [ |
| Disability weight (moderate anaemia) | 0.058 (0.04–0.09) | Lognormal | μ = -2.85; σ = 0.21 | [ |
| Disability weight (infectious disease: acute episode, severe) | 0.21 (0.14–0.30) | Lognormal | μ = -1.56; σ = 0.19 | [ |
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| Incidence of clinical malaria SP arm (episodes per PYAR) | 0.17 | Point estimate | - | [ |
| Clinical malaria Relative Risk MQ arm—First or only episode. [Incidence (Episodes person/year) in the SP group = 0.17; incidence in the MQ group = 0.12] | 0.67 (0.52–0.88) | Lognormal | μ = -0.42; σ = 0.14 | [ |
| Anaemia at delivery (Hb<11 g/dl) Relative Risk MQ arm [Prevalence in the SP group = 44.1; prevalence in the MQ group = 40.5] | 0.92 (0.85–0.99) | Lognormal | μ = -0.08; σ = 0.04 | [ |
| Case fatality ratio malaria % | 0.33 (0.26–0.45) | Beta | α = 3.91; β = 1182.49 | [ |
| Case fatality ratio anaemia % | 1 | Beta | α = 98.99; β = 9800.01 | [ |
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| Drop out rate first dose MQ % | 2 | Beta | α = 97.98; β = 4801.02 | [ |
| Drop out rate second dose MQ % | 14 | Beta | α = 85.86; β = 527.43 | [ |
| Drop out rate first dose SP % | 1 | Beta | α = 98.99; β = 9800.01 | [ |
| Drop out rate second dose SP % | 8 | Beta | α = 91.92; β = 1057.08 | [ |
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| % of malaria cases seeking care | 50 | Triangular symmetric | Min = 40; Max = 60 | [ |
| % of malaria cases in pregnancy that are severe | 6 | Point estimate | - | [ |
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| Health system inpatient savings per malaria episode (US$) | 188.68 | Gamma | α = 2.14; β = 88.06 | Our estimate |
| Health system outpatient savings per malaria episode (US$) | 11.61 | Gamma | α = 5.01; β = 2.31 | Our estimate |
| Households’ outpatient direct treatment savings per malaria episode (US$) | 13.47 | Gamma | α = 0.14; β = 93.39 | Our estimate |
| Households’ outpatient indirect treatment savings per malaria episode (US$) | 1.58 | Gamma | α = 0.16; β = 9.62 | Our estimate |
| Households’ inpatient direct treatment savings per malaria episode (US$) | 89.15 | Gamma | α = 0.43; β = 204.60 | Our estimate |
| Households’ inpatient indirect treatment savings per malaria episode (US$) | 2.69 | Gamma | α = 0.12; β = 22.07 | Our estimate |
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| Health system inpatient savings per malaria episode (US$) | 40.65 | Gamma | α = 100; β = 0.41 | Our estimate |
| Health system outpatient savings per malaria episode (US$) | 4.32 | Gamma | α = 100; β = 0.04 | Our estimate |
| Households’ outpatient direct treatment savings per malaria episode (US$) | 2.16 | Gamma | α = 0.16; β = 13.74 | Our estimate |
| Households’ outpatient indirect treatment savings per malaria episode (US$) | 0.8 | Gamma | α = 0.17; β = 4.65 | Our estimate |
| Households’ inpatient direct treatment savings per malaria episode (US$) | 20.97 | Gamma | α = 0.56; β = 37.32 | Our estimate |
| Households’ inpatient indirect treatment savings per malaria episode (US$) | 1.75 | Gamma | α = 0.13; β = 13.63 | Our estimate |
All monetary values are expressed in US$ 2012
IPTp = Intermittent Preventive Treatment of malaria in pregnancy; HIV = Human Immunodeficiency Virus
MQ = Mefloquine; SP = Sulphadoxine-Phyrimethamine; PYAR = Person-year at risk; RR = Relative Risk.
α, β are the parameters of the Beta and Gamma distributions and μ, σ are the parameters of the lognormal distribution.
*Medicine for malaria venture price under negotiation and ranges given by lowest and highest Global Fund procurement prices.
**The average Global Fund procurement price for SP in Sub-Saharan Africa for the year 2012.
Input variables of the threshold and cost-effectiveness analyses of IPTp-MQ compared with IPTp-placebo in HIV-positive pregnant women.
| Values (range/CI 95%) | Distribution | Estimated Parameters | Source | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
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| Time nurses take to provide 1 dose MQ (minutes) | 5.5 | Triangular symmetric | Min = 5; Max = 6 | Self reported by nurses |
| Nurses' monthly cost of labour (US$) | 332.17 | Gamma | α = 205.95; β = 1.61 | Country MoH |
| MQ (250 mg) price per tablet (US$) | 0.51 | Triangular asymmetric | Min = 0.46; Max = 0.9 | MMV + GF |
| Average number of tablets per dose MQ—includes drug wastage | 3.75 | Point estimate | - | [ |
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| Discount rate | 0.03 | Point estimate | - | Assumption |
| Incidence of all cause admissions placebo arm (episodes per PYAR) | 0.35 | Point estimate | - | [ |
| Non-obstetric hospital admissions Relative Risk MQ arm [Incidence (episodes per person/year) placebo group = 0.35; incidence MQ group = 0.20] | 0.59 (0.37–0.95) | Lognormal | μ = -0.49; σ = 0.24 | [ |
| Across country average Life Expectancy of women aged 26.5 years (in years, for the year 2011) | 44.06 | Point estimate | - | [ |
| Sensitivity analysis: Life Expectancy of Japanese women aged 26.5 (in years, for the year 2011) | 61.38 | Point estimate | - | [ |
| Disability weights infectious diseases (acute severe episode) | 0.21 (0.14–0.29) | Lognormal | μ = -1.56; σ = 0.19 | [ |
| Disability weights moderate abdominopelvic problem | 0.12 (0.08–0.18) | Lognormal | μ = -2.09; σ = 0.19 | [ |
| Disability weights severe anaemia | 0.164 (0.11–0.23) | Lognormal | μ = -1.81; σ = 0.18 | [ |
| Length disability | 0.0273 | Gamma | μ = 100; σ = 0.0003 | |
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| Case fatality ratio HIV positive adults with all cause co-morbidity % | 35 | Beta | α = 64.65; β = 120.06 | [ |
| Case fatality ratio severe anaemia % | 1.4 | Beta | α = 1.03; β = 72.60 | [ |
| Case fatality ratio maternal disorders % | 3.4 | Beta | α = 96.57; β = 2,743.61 | [ |
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| Drop out rate first dose MQ % | 2 | Beta | α = 97.98; β = 4,801.02 | [ |
| Drop out rate second dose MQ % | 10 | Beta | α = 89.9; β = 809.10 | [ |
| Drop out rate third dose MQ % | 19 | Beta | α = 80.81; β = 344.50 | [ |
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| Health system inpatient savings per hospitalisation episode (US$) | 28.48 | Gamma | α = 6.48; β = 4.39 | Our estimate |
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| Direct | 10.92 | Gamma | α = 6.48; β = 4.39 | Our estimate |
| Indirect | 5.34 | Gamma | α = 6.48; β = 4.39 | Our estimate |
All monetary values are expressed in US$ 2012
IPTp = Intermittent Preventive Treatment of malaria in pregnancy; HIV = Human Immunodeficiency Virus
MQ = Mefloquine; SP = Sulphadoxine-Phyrimethamine; PYAR = Person-year at risk; RR = Relative Risk.
α, β are the parameters of the Beta and Gamma distributions and μ, σ are the parameters of the lognormal distribution.
*Medicine for malaria venture price under negotiation and ranges given by lowest and highest Global Fund procurement prices.
HIV-negative trial: Results of cost-effectiveness analysis (per 1000 pregnant HIV-negative women).
| Value (CI 95%) | |
|---|---|
|
| |
| Number of maternal clinical malaria episodes averted | 55.14 (54.47; 55.81) |
| Number of maternal anaemia at delivery cases averted | 13.39 (13.12; 13.66) |
| Number of malaria admissions averted | 3.31 (3.27; 3.35) |
| Number of malaria outpatient visits averted | 27.14 (27.14; 27.83) |
| Number of malaria deaths averted | 0.18 (0.178; 0.183) |
| Number of anaemia deaths averted | 0.13 (0.131; 0.136) |
| Number of DALYs averted (malaria + anaemia) | 9.23 (9.09; 9.38) |
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| Incremental costs (IPTp-MQ—IPTp-SP) (US$) | 2,007.21 (1,992.48; 2,021.93) |
| Health system treatment savings (US$) | 949.10 (925.29; 972.91) |
| Incremental net costs | 1,058.11 (1,030.16; 1,086.05) |
| Net incremental costs per DALY averted | 136.30 (131.41; 141.18) |
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| Households direct treatment savings (US$) | 668.97 (619.13; 718.81) |
| Households indirect treatment savings (US$) | -44.23 (-49.58; -38.87) |
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| Incremental costs (IPTp-MQ—IPTp-SP) (US$) | 1,992.02 (1,977.42; 2,006.63) |
| Health system treatment savings (US$) | 254.61 (251.33; 257.89) |
| Incremental net costs | 1,737.41 (1,722.42; 1,752.41) |
| Net incremental costs per DALY averted | 237.78 (230.99; 244.57) |
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| Households direct treatment savings (US$) | 128.29 (120.01; 136.56) |
| Households indirect treatment savings (US$) | -51.74(-54.49; -48.99) |
All monetary values are expressed in US$ 2012
IPTp = Intermittent Preventive Treatment of malaria in pregnancy; HIV = Human Immunodeficiency Virus
MQ = Mefloquine; SP = Sulphadoxine-Phyrimethamine; DALY = Disability-adjusted Life Year.
*Incremental net costs are equal Incremental cost minus Health system treatment savings
**Net incremental costs per DALY averted are equal Incremental net costs divided by number of DALYs averted
HIV-positive trial: Results of the cost-effectiveness analysis (per 1000 pregnant HIV-positive women).
| Value (CI 95%) | |
|---|---|
|
| |
| Number of non-obstetric admissions averted | 138.91 (136.60; 141.22) |
| Number of deaths averted | 24.57 (24.15; 24.99) |
| Number of DALYs averted | 603.33 (592.94; 613.72) |
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| Costs associated with IPTp-MQ (US$) | 6,667.86 (6.625.15; 6,710.56) |
| Health system treatment savings (US$) | 3,954.90 (3,854.54; 4,055.26) |
| Incremental net cost | 2,712.96 (2,658.30; 2,767.62) |
| Net incremental costs per DALY averted | 6.96 (4.22; 9.70) |
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| Households direct savings (US$) | 1,519.10 (1,470.34; 1,567.86) |
| Households indirect savings (US$) | 543.90 (530.64; 557.16) |
All monetary values are expressed in US$ 2012
IPTp = Intermittent Preventive Treatment of malaria in pregnancy; HIV = Human Immunodeficiency Virus
MQ = Mefloquine; SP = Sulphadoxine-Phyrimethamine; DALY = Disability-adjusted Life Year.
*Incremental net costs are equal to Costs associated with IPTp-MQ minus Health system treatment savings
**Net incremental costs per DALY averted are equal to Incremental net costs divided by Number of DALYs averted
Fig 2Cost effectiveness plane: IPTp-MQ versus IPTp-SP in HIV-negative pregnant women in Benin, Gabon, Mozambique and Tanzania.
IPTp-MQ = Intermittent Preventive Treatment of malaria in pregnancy with Mefloquine; IPTp-SP = Intermittent Preventive Treatment of malaria in pregnancy with Sulphadoxine-Phyrimethamine; HIV = Human Immunodeficiency Virus; DALYs = Disability-adjusted life years. The graph plots 2,000 Monte Carlo simulations of the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) with respect to its components: health impact (X-axis) and incremental costs (Y-axis). Average simulation point, ellipse of confidence (95%) and threshold level of the ICER (240 US$/DALY averted) are also depicted. Cost-effective dots are placed below/right the threshold line.
Fig 4Cost effectiveness plane: IPTp-MQ versus IPTp-Placebo in HIV-positive pregnant women in Kenya, Mozambique and Tanzania.
IPTp-MQ = Intermittent Preventive Treatment of malaria in pregnancy with Mefloquine; HIV = Human Immunodeficiency Virus; DALYs = Disability-adjusted life years. The graph plots 2,000 Monte Carlo simulations of the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) with respect to its components: health impact (X-axis) and incremental costs (Y-axis). Average simulation point, ellipse of confidence (95%) and threshold level of the ICER (240 US$/DALY averted) are also depicted.
Fig 3Cost effectiveness plane: IPTp-MQ versus IPTp-SP in HIV-negative pregnant women in Benin, Mozambique and Tanzania.
IPTp-MQ = Intermittent Preventive Treatment of malaria in pregnancy with Mefloquine; IPTp-SP = Intermittent Preventive Treatment of malaria in pregnancy with Sulphadoxine-Phyrimethamine; HIV = Human Immunodeficiency Virus; DALYs = Disability-adjusted life years. The graph plots N = 2,000 Monte Carlo simulations of the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) with respect to its components: health impact (X-axis) and incremental costs (Y-axis). Average simulation point, ellipse of confidence (95%) and threshold level of the ICER (240 US$/DALY averted) are also depicted. Cost-effective dots are placed below/right the threshold line.
Fig 5Cost-effectiveness of IPTp-MQ versus IPTp-SP in HIV-negative pregnant women in Benin, Gabon, Mozambique and Tanzania: acceptability curves.
IPTp-MQ = Intermittent Preventive Treatment of malaria in pregnancy with Mefloquine; IPTp-SP = Intermittent Preventive Treatment of malaria in pregnancy with Sulphadoxine-Phyrimethamine; HIV = Human Immunodeficiency Virus; DALYs = Disability-adjusted life years. Acceptability curves were constructed by plotting the cumulative distribution of the incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) of IPTp-MQ compared with IPTp-SP per DALYs averted. The Y axis is interpreted as probability that the intervention is cost-effective for every level of policy makers’ willingness to pay for each DALY averted (X axis). US$ 136.30 per DALY averted (CI95% 131.41–141.18) is the ICER for the scenario including Benin, Gabon, Mozambique and Tanzania. US$ 237.99 (CI95% 230.99–244.57) per DALY averted is the ICER for the scenario excluding Gabon.
Fig 6Cost-effectiveness of IPTp-MQ versus IPTp-Placebo in HIV-positive pregnant women in Kenya, Mozambique and Tanzania: acceptability curve.
IPTp-MQ = Intermittent Preventive Treatment of malaria in pregnancy with Mefloquine; HIV = Human Immunodeficiency Virus; DALYs = Disability-adjusted life years. The acceptability curve was constructed by plotting the cumulative distribution of the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) of IPTp-MQ compared with IPTp-Placebo per DALYs averted. The Y axis is interpreted as probability that the intervention is cost-effective for every level of policy makers’ willingness to pay for each DALY averted (X axis). US$ 6.96 per DALY averted (CI95% 4.22–9.70) is the ICER resulting from the analysis.
Fig 7Results of the threshold analysis of IPTp-MQ among HIV-negative and HIV-positive pregnant women.
IPTp = Intermittent Preventive Treatment of malaria in pregnancy; HIV = Human Immunodeficiency Virus; MQ = Mefloquine; SP = Sulphadoxine-Phyrimethamine; PYAR = Person-year at risk; RR = Relative Risk. The graph depicts up to which level (threshold level) several variables can increase or decrease from their current level for the interventions to remain cost-effective.