| Literature DB >> 25991142 |
Barbara Giannini1, Roberta Gazzarata1, Patrizia Orcamo2, Caterina Merlano2, Giovanni Cenderello3, Alberto Venturini3, Antonio Di Biagio4, Giovanni Mazzarello4, Marcello Montefiori5, Marta Ameri5, Maurizio Setti6, Claudio Viscoli4, Giovanni Cassola3, Mauro Giacomini1.
Abstract
HIV treatment is based on combined antiretroviral therapy (cART) which has substantially improved survival, thus resulting in an increase in patient life expectancy as well as in the cost of HIV-related medical care. Therefore, several cost effectiveness studies were implemented worldwide, with one specifically in the Liguria region (Italy), to compare the annual economic expense in this area for HIV services, and the related improvement in patients' health. The IANUA project is intended to implement both cost-effectiveness and cost-utility analysis, therefore data related to clinical indicators and perceived health status were collected, the latter using a questionnaire based on the EQ-5D-3L. Information about the antiretroviral drugs and the relative quantity that a patient withdraws from the hospital pharmacy every month were extracted from the regional "F-file". All data gathered were stored in the Ligurian HIV Network, a web platform developed by the DIBRIS - Medinfo laboratory. More than eight hundred questionnaires were collected, and data will be elaborated by economists and psychologists. The first statistical elaborations showed that, as expected, costs increased as the number of therapeutic lines increased. Moreover, the average annual costs for patients whose last CD4 values were below 200 cells/mmc corresponded to the maximum expense recorded, however, the cost for patients with final CD4 counts above 500 cells/mmc was not, as expected, the lowest found. This can be explained by the fact that stabilized patients, who had CD4 values below 500 cells/mmc, did not need very expensive care, while patients with CD4 counts above 500 cells/mmc improved their health status thanks to cART.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25991142
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stud Health Technol Inform ISSN: 0926-9630