| Literature DB >> 26459265 |
Marc Baguelin1,2, Anton Camacho3, Stefan Flasche4, W John Edmunds5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The present study aims to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of extending the pre-2013 influenza immunisation programme for high-risk and elderly individuals to those at low risk of developing complications following infection with seasonal influenza.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26459265 PMCID: PMC4604076 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-015-0452-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Vaccine strategies evaluated in the study
| Base policy | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No vaccination | Risk group only (Pre-2000 ) | Risk group and elderly (Post-2000) | Risk group (75 %) and elderly | |||||
| Extension | None | X | X | X | X | |||
| 2–4 years | 50 % | 50 % | 15 % | 30 % | 50 % | 70 % | 50 % | |
| 50–64 years | 50 % | 50 % | 15 % | 30 % | 50 % | 70 % | 50 % | |
| 5–16 years | 50 % | 50 % | 15 % | 30 % | 50 % | 70 % | 50 % | |
| 2–4 and 50–64 years | 50 % | 50 % | 15 % | 30 % | 50 % | 70 % | 50 % | |
| 2–16 years | 50 % | 50 % | 15 % | 30 % | 50 % | 70 % | 50 % | |
| 2–16 and 50–64 years | 50 % | 50 % | 15 % | 30 % | 50 % | 70 % | 50 % | |
| 2–64 years | 50 % | 50 % | 15 % | 30 % | 50 % | 70 % | 50 % | |
Vaccination strategies evaluated in this study. Strategies are built on a base policy and an extension to groups among the population at low risk of complications. Coverage figures are for the extension while for the base policy historical figures observed other the length of the study are used. A total of 53 scenarios have been evaluated, each of them represented by a cell in this table
Parameters of the economic model
| Parameter | Estimate | Uncertainty | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Relative risk of consulting a GP in a risk group | 1.51 | Normal (μ = 1.51, sd = 0.18) | Flusurvey ( |
| Cost of vaccination | 15.85 | Triangular (vertices 12, 15.55, 20) | Personal communication (Department of Health) |
| Febrile cases | 0.406 | Triangular on [0.309–0.513] | Review of volunteer studies [ |
| All ARI cases | 0.645 | Triangular on [0.546–0.733] | Review of volunteer studies [ |
| QALY loss per non-fatal ILI case | 7.49 × 10-3 | Bootstrap from data on H1N1 pdm | Van Hoek et al. [ |
| QALY loss per non-fatal ARI case | 1.01 × 10-3 | Normal (μ = 1.01 × 10-3, sd = 8.35 × 10-5) | Camacho et al. [ |
| QALY loss per hospitalisation | 0.018 | Normal (mu=0.018, sigma=0.0018) | Siddiqui et al. [ |
| Hospital cost (per episode) | £840 | Lognormal (normal μ = 839, normal σ = 192.1) | Baguelin et al. [ |
| GP cost (per consultation) | £37 | Lognormal (normal μ = 37, normal σ = 8.4) | Baguelin et al. [ |
Values of parameters used in the economic model and their associated uncertainty. As part of the probabilistic sensitivity analysis, more uncertainty is added by using the distributions of estimates from Cromer et al. [11] rather than the mean estimates when estimating the risk of different health outcomes following one influenza infection
GP, General practitioner; ARI, Acute (non-influenza-like) respiratory infections; ILI, Influenza-like illness; QALY, Quality-adjusted life year
Incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs)
| Increment | ICER (£/QALY) | Net benefit in £M | 95 % credibility interval |
|---|---|---|---|
| Elderly- and risk-group → 2–4 y | 2,613 | 74 | (12–265.7) |
| 2–4 y → 5–16 y | 1,569 | 384.4 | (85.4–1309.6) |
| 5–16 y → 2–16 y | 3,414 | 58.7 | (8.4–212.8) |
| 2–16 y → 2–16 y & 50–64 y | 8,093 | 75.9 | (–11.5 to 346.1) |
| 2–16 y & 50–64 y → 2–64 y | 8,868 | 198.8 | (–46.8 to 950.8) |
Table of the incremental cost-effectiveness ratios and net benefit for the proposed immunization strategies. Strategies are ordered in terms of their net cost, and the incremental costs and incremental benefits of the next most expensive strategy is compared with the previous one. Dominated strategies (50–64 year age group and 2–4 and 50–64 year age groups) have been excluded
QALY, Quality-adjusted life year
Summary results of model
| Scenario | Elderly- and risk-group | No vaccination | 2–4 y | 50–64 y | 5–16 y | 2–4 & 50–64 y | 2–16 y | 2–16 & 50–64 y | 2–64 y |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cases mean (000s) | 5,325 | 6,474 | 4,914 | 4,668 | 2,882 | 4,269 | 2,559 | 1,971 | 322 |
| Low | 3,787 | 4,641 | 3,506 | 3,268 | 1,764 | 3,006 | 1,513 | 1,075 | 30 |
| High | 7,137 | 8,548 | 6,544 | 6,323 | 4,215 | 5,760 | 3,780 | 3,044 | 816 |
| GP mean | 603,095 | 721,152 | 539,893 | 541,134 | 313,892 | 480,317 | 264,246 | 207,979 | 37,544 |
| Low | 368,255 | 451,303 | 323,362 | 321,755 | 169,135 | 283,818 | 133,495 | 95,343 | 3,383 |
| High | 916,405 | 1,056,782 | 822,924 | 826,488 | 536,822 | 737,721 | 458,143 | 377,580 | 95,980 |
| Hospitalisations mean | 11,957 | 16,259 | 10,348 | 10,648 | 7,024 | 9,113 | 5,812 | 4,635 | 1,166 |
| Low | 6,861 | 9,439 | 5,951 | 5,993 | 3,279 | 5,079 | 2,509 | 1,778 | 59 |
| High | 19,152 | 26,641 | 16,820 | 17,307 | 12,299 | 14,952 | 10,468 | 8,753 | 3,223 |
| Death mean | 1,784 | 2,917 | 1,668 | 1,568 | 1,099 | 1,454 | 985 | 778 | 179 |
| Low | 643 | 1,081 | 602 | 573 | 346 | 530 | 289 | 198 | 6 |
| High | 3,930 | 6,440 | 3,677 | 3,386 | 2,507 | 3,180 | 2,268 | 1,887 | 625 |
| Non death QALYs mean | 40,514 | 49,365 | 37,375 | 35,495 | 21,896 | 32,450 | 19,446 | 14,946 | 2,429 |
| Low | 3,852 | 4,752 | 3,555 | 3,353 | 2,054 | 3,087 | 1,794 | 1,337 | 81 |
| High | 126,421 | 152,964 | 115,649 | 111,676 | 67,157 | 101,865 | 58,597 | 45,899 | 10,242 |
| Death associated QALYs mean | 13,554 | 21,660 | 12,684 | 11,932 | 8,371 | 11,073 | 7,508 | 5,936 | 1,316 |
| Low | 5,711 | 8,669 | 5,279 | 4,917 | 2,962 | 4,497 | 2,561 | 1,791 | 52 |
| High | 28,198 | 44,823 | 26,431 | 24,196 | 17,590 | 22,877 | 16,155 | 13,454 | 4,465 |
| QALYs loss total mean | 54,068 | 71,025 | 50,059 | 47,426 | 30,267 | 43,523 | 26,953 | 20,882 | 3,745 |
| Low | 13,253 | 19,358 | 12,387 | 11,767 | 7,954 | 10,915 | 6,940 | 5,336 | 380 |
| High | 141,995 | 177,528 | 131,318 | 125,105 | 76,379 | 114,248 | 68,559 | 52,870 | 11,601 |
| Mean programme cost (£K) | 134,817 | – | 149,012 | 187,054 | 191,283 | 201,248 | 205,477 | 257,714 | 418,988 |
| Low | 105,494 | – | 117,032 | 147,680 | 151,915 | 159,480 | 163,653 | 206,070 | 335,773 |
| High | 163,856 | – | 180,742 | 225,997 | 230,463 | 242,665 | 247,481 | 309,787 | 502,957 |
| HC cost mean (£K) | 32,607 | 40,664 | 28,886 | 29,184 | 17,669 | 25,615 | 14,788 | 11,687 | 2,378 |
| Low | 18,591 | 24,017 | 16,432 | 16,079 | 8,932 | 14,163 | 7,101 | 4,961 | 173 |
| High | 54,172 | 66,369 | 48,275 | 48,485 | 31,087 | 42,387 | 26,175 | 21,276 | 6,130 |
| Cost total mean (£K) | 167,425 | 40,664 | 177,898 | 216,238 | 208,952 | 226,863 | 220,265 | 269,401 | 421,366 |
| Low | 124,085 | 24,017 | 133,464 | 163,758 | 160,847 | 173,642 | 170,753 | 211,031 | 335,946 |
| High | 218,027 | 66,369 | 229,018 | 274,482 | 261,551 | 285,052 | 273,656 | 331,063 | 509,087 |
The average annual number of influenza-like illness (febrile) cases, GP consultations, etc. are shown along with measures of their distribution for each of the strategies (columns)
GP, General practitioner; QALY, Quality-adjusted life year
Fig. 1Incremental analysis with costs and quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) gained. Estimated change in costs and QALYs gained over the elderly- and risk-group strategy, for each of the extensions to the vaccination programme. Note that the comparison in each case is with the elderly- and risk-group strategy. Each contour line represents 90 % of the Monte Carlo simulations with the coloured point inside being the mean outcome of the scenario. The two diagonal lines represent £20,000 (solid) and £30,000 per QALY gained. Unfilled circles indicate strategies which are dominated by others. The arrows indicate the pathway of increasing costs for the incremental analysis
Sensitivity to discount rates and coverage in risk groups
| a) 3.5 % discount (Base case) | |||||||
| Extension to | 2–4 | 50–64 | 5–16 | 2–4 + 50–64 | 2–16 | 2–16 + 50–64 | 2–64 |
| ICER | 2613 | 7350 | 1745 | 5637 | 1949 | 3073 | 5046 |
| Net benefit in mil £ | 74 | 91 | 460 | 164 | 521 | 604 | 819 |
| Lower | 12 | –8 | 94 | 9 | 104 | 93 | 65 |
| Higher | 266 | 385 | 1577 | 614 | 1785 | 2107 | 3046 |
| b) 1.5 % discount | |||||||
| Extension to | 2–4 | 50–64 | 5–16 | 2–4 + 50–64 | 2–16 | 2–16 + 50–64 | 2–64 |
| ICER | 2509 | 7030 | 1675 | 5398 | 1869 | 2943 | 4818 |
| Net benefit | 79 | 99 | 487 | 177 | 551 | 642 | 875 |
| Lower | 15 | –2 | 115 | 17 | 126 | 118 | 108 |
| Higher | 272 | 394 | 1615 | 626 | 1820 | 2141 | 3090 |
| c) 0 % discount | |||||||
| Extension to | 2–4 | 50–64 | 5–16 | 2–4 + 50–64 | 2–16 | 2–16 + 50–64 | 2–64 |
| ICER | 2406 | 6715 | 1604 | 5162 | 1788 | 2813 | 4590 |
| Net benefit | 83 | 107 | 515 | 190 | 584 | 680 | 941 |
| Lower | 18 | 3 | 135 | 25 | 148 | 153 | 159 |
| Higher | 276 | 401 | 1643 | 639 | 1864 | 2174 | 3139 |
| d) Risk groups vaccinated with a 75 % coverage | |||||||
| Extension to | 2–4 | 50–64 | 5–16 | 2–4 + 50–64 | 2–16 | 2–16 + 50–64 | 2–64 |
| ICER | 2748 | 8677 | 2393 | 6655 | 2618 | 3844 | 6667 |
| Net benefit | 72 | 86 | 417 | 158 | 463 | 520 | 592 |
| Lower | 11 | –17 | 71 | –3 | 75 | 59 | –17 |
| Higher | 258 | 381 | 1438 | 600 | 1607 | 1847 | 2411 |
Cost-effectiveness ratios (compared with the elderly- and risk-group strategy) and net benefits with associated 95 % credibility intervals using different discount rates (a–c) for future benefits (QALYs) and a different baseline (d) for the coverage in risk-groups (75 %)
ICER, Incremental cost effectiveness ratio
Fig. 2Incremental net benefit over the elderly- and risk-group programme. Incremental net benefit of different extension over the elderly- and risk-group programme for different levels of coverage (left panel) and net benefit for the base case at 50 % coverage (right panel). Dominated scenario are indicated by empty disk and bars
Fig. 3Benefits from extension to low-risk 2–16-year-old children. Benefits (in terms of non-death and death-associated Quality-Adjusted Life Days per year and per person of that age and risk group) gained from extension of vaccination to low-risk 2–16-year-old children. The benefit is given for each age and risk group (pink bars low risk, blue bars high risk). Note the change of scale in the last panel