| Literature DB >> 26477039 |
Bernhard Ultsch1, Oliver Damm2, Philippe Beutels3, Joke Bilcke3, Bernd Brüggenjürgen4, Andreas Gerber-Grote5, Wolfgang Greiner2, Germaine Hanquet6, Raymond Hutubessy7, Mark Jit8,9, Mirjam Knol10, Rüdiger von Kries11, Alexander Kuhlmann12, Daniel Levy-Bruhl13, Matthias Perleth14, Maarten Postma15, Heini Salo16, Uwe Siebert17,18, Jürgen Wasem19, Ole Wichmann20.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Incremental cost-effectiveness and cost-utility analyses [health economic evaluations (HEEs)] of vaccines are routinely considered in decision making on immunization in various industrialized countries. While guidelines advocating more standardization of such HEEs (mainly for curative drugs) exist, several immunization-specific aspects (e.g. indirect effects or discounting approach) are still a subject of debate within the scientific community.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26477039 PMCID: PMC4766233 DOI: 10.1007/s40273-015-0335-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacoeconomics ISSN: 1170-7690 Impact factor: 4.981
Fig. 1Map of Europe indicating whether results from economic evaluations of vaccines are routinely considered in recommendations, based on [9, 11–14] (asterisk no response from country, country not considered, Malta and Cypress not shown)
Systematic literature research
| Topics | Vaccines and infectious diseases | Economic evaluation | Guidelines | Methods | Decision making |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Search terms (in Title OR Abstract) | Vaccine OR Vaccination OR Vaccinate OR Vaccinating OR Vaccinated OR Immunization OR Immunisation OR Immunize OR Immunise OR Infectious disease OR Communicable disease OR Preventable disease | Cost OR Cost effectiveness OR Cost utility OR Cost benefit OR Benefit cost OR Cost saving OR Economic OR Pharmacoeconomic OR Pharmacoeconomics OR Budget impact OR Efficiency OR Efficient OR Monetary OR Financial OR ICER OR QALY | Guideline OR Guide OR Good-practice OR Good OR practice OR Good research practice OR Standards OR Standard OR Recommendation OR Recommendations OR Framework OR Frameworks OR Primer OR Consensus | Methoda OR Methodsa OR Methodological OR Decision analytic OR Decision analysis OR Decision analyses OR Modela OR Modelsa OR Modellinga OR Modelinga OR Model based OR Simulation OR Simulation OR Mathematical OR Transmission OR Dynamic OR Discounting OR Interaction OR Herd immunity OR Herd protection OR Herd effects OR Indirect effects OR Population-wide benefits OR Waning | Decision making OR Reimbursement OR Fourth hurdle OR Payer OR Pricing OR Funding OR Willingness to pay OR Threshold OR Value for money OR Social value OR Social preferences OR Public health |
| Search branch 1 | • | AND • | AND • | ||
| Search branch 2 | • | AND • | AND • | ||
| Search branch ‘methods’ (1 + 2) | • | AND • | AND • | AND • | |
| Search branch ‘decision making’ (3) | • | AND • | AND • |
aSearched in title only
Fig. 2Flow chart of the systematic literature review
Fig. 3Flow chart for model choice adopted from the World Health Organization [4]
Evaluation strategies of health economic models [37]
| Evaluation strategy | Target population | Time horizon | Start of evaluation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Category 1 | Entire population | Fixed TH (several years or decades) | From implementation of vaccination |
| Category 2 | Entire population | 1 year | From steady state |
| Category 3 | Cohorta | Cohort’s lifetime or fixed TH | From implementation of vaccination |
| Category 4 | Cohorta | Cohort’s lifetime or fixed TH | From steady state |
TH time horizon
aOne or more cohorts
Definition of uncertainty analyses based on expert consensus and literature [22, 30, 42, 55, 87, 112]
| Type of uncertainty | Sensitivity analysis | Scenario analysis | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Parameter uncertainty | Methodological/normative uncertainty | Structural/model uncertainty | ||
| Deterministic sensitivity analysis | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| PSA | Yes | NA | NA | NA |
| Examples | • Efficacy | • Transmission dynamic vs. discrete-event simulations | • Presence of a immune state (SIS vs. SIR) | • Coverage |
NA not applicable, PSA probabilistic sensitivity analysis, SIR susceptible-infectious-recovered, SIS susceptible-infectious-susceptible
Fig. 4Decision making continuum, adapted from expert-group discussion. HEE health economic evaluation, MCDA multi-criteria decision analysis
| Health economic evaluations (HEEs) on vaccines and vaccination programmes should always be considered by decision-making bodies when considering inclusion of a new vaccine into the national programme to avoid suboptimal allocation of resources. |
| Proper evaluation of vaccines implies using tools that are not commonly used for therapeutic drugs in HEEs. However, vaccines should only be treated differently where they really are different (e.g. indirect effects). |
| Funders and decision-makers should recognize that proper and valid HEEs (of vaccines) demand time and resources. |