| Literature DB >> 26198884 |
Nikolaos Kotsopoulos1, Mark P Connolly, Vanessa Remy.
Abstract
HPV infections can cause substantial burden in females and males as it is associated with several genital cancers, in addition to genital warts. Traditional economic evaluations often focus on quantifying cost-effectiveness, however, it is increasingly recognized that vaccinations may generate broader benefits not captured in cost-effectiveness analysis. Τhe aim of this study was to evaluate the broader economic consequences associated with HPV vaccination in males and females and to conduct a lifetime cost-benefit analysis of investing in universal vaccination in Germany from the perspective of government. Methodologies from generational accounting, human capital and health economics were combined to estimate the broader economic consequences of HPV vaccination including the fiscal impact for the government. A cohort model was developed simulating the medical costs and average lifetime fiscal transfers between the government and 12-year-old immunized and non-immunized males and females. To estimate tax revenue attributed to vaccination-related changes in morbidity and mortality, direct and indirect tax rates were linked to differences in age- and gender-specific earnings. Based on HPV vaccination costs, the base case cost-benefit analysis demonstrated that investing <euro>1 in universal HPV vaccination could yield <euro>1.7 in gross tax revenue over the lifetime of the cohorts. After taking into consideration the governmental transfers, universal HPV vaccination in Germany could result in incremental positive net discounted taxes (i.e. tax revenue-transfers) from <euro>62 million for the German government. The vaccination of males and females with the quadrivalent HPV vaccine is likely to have positive effects on public finances.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26198884 PMCID: PMC4510306 DOI: 10.1186/s13561-015-0054-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Econ Rev ISSN: 2191-1991
Modelled vaccine’s efficacy per disease and costs per case
| Disease | Vaccine efficacya (1) | Proportion attributable to HPV 6/11/16/18b (2) | Model’s efficacy (1) × (2) | Cost per case | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GW | Females 99 %; 89 % for males | 90 % | Females 89 %; males 81 % | €550 | [ |
| CIN I | 98 % | 35 % | 34.3 % | €336 | [ |
| CIN II | 98 % | 55 % | 53.9 % | €336 | |
| CIN III | 97 % | 55 % | 53.3 % | €1,498 | |
| Cervical cancer | 100 % | 76 % | 76 % | €12,499 | |
| Anal cancer | 87 % | 79 % | 68.7 % | Females €25,097; males €29,473 | [ |
| Vulvar cancer | 100 % | 37 % | 37 % | €12,499 | (Equal to cervical cancer cost) |
| Vaginal cancer | 100 % | 61 % | 61 % | €12,499 | |
| H&N cancer (in sensitivity analysis) | 78-96 % on persistent infection | 19 % | 18.2 % | Females €16,990; males €18,188 | [ |
aSources for vaccine efficacy. Gardasil SPC; in the absence of clinical data on vaccine’s efficacy against H&N cancers (for which there is currently no indication), efficacy against HPV16/18 persistent infection has been used in sensitivity analysis (no efficacy considered in base case)
bSources for proportion attributable to HPV 6/11/16/18, [27–33, 1, 34]
Estimated discounted lifetime societal, fiscal and medical cost burden for immunized and non-immunized cohorts of males and females
| Outcome | Immunized | Non-immunized | Incremental |
|---|---|---|---|
| BOD-fiscal in terms of discounted lifetime gross tax loss due to premature mortality | € 117,502,550 | € 130,864,666 | -€ 13,362,116 |
| BOD-societal in terms of discounted lifetime productivity loss due to premature mortality | € 209,825,982 | € 233,686,903 | -€ 23,860,921 |
| Discounted lifetime HPV– related medical costs | € 692,164,462 | € 863,973,983 | -€ 171,809,521 |
| Vaccination investment cost | €107,525,880 | € - | € 107,525,880 |
CBA of male, female and universal vaccination from the government and societal perspectives
| Societal CBA | Discounted benefits minus Investment Costs | Discounted BCR |
|---|---|---|
| Male | € (37,465,618) | 0.3 |
| Female | € 125,610,180 | 3.3 |
| Both | € 88,144,562 | 1.8 |
| Fiscal CBA | Discounted benefits minus Investment Costs | Discounted BCR |
| Male | € (37,858,997) | 0.3 |
| Female | € 115,504,754 | 3.1 |
| Both | € 77,645,757 | 1.7 |
Fig. 1Cumulative incremental net discounted tax of the combined cohort over time. NPV: net present value
Fig. 2One-way sensitivity and scenario analyses for the fiscal BCR