| Literature DB >> 27042389 |
Wenjun Wang1, Jingjing Wang2, Shuangsuo Dang1, Guihua Zhuang3.
Abstract
Background. Hepatitis B virus (HBV) infections are perinatally transmitted from chronically infected mothers. Supplemental antiviral therapy during late pregnancy with lamivudine (LAM), telbivudine (LdT), or tenofovir (TDF) can substantially reduce perinatal HBV transmission compared to postnatal immunoprophylaxis (IP) alone. However, the cost-effectiveness of these measures is not clear. Aim. This study evaluated the cost-effectiveness from a societal perspective of supplemental antiviral agents for preventing perinatal HBV transmission in mothers with high viral load (>6 log10 copies/mL). Methods. A systematic review and network meta-analysis were performed for the risk of perinatal HBV transmission with antiviral therapies. A decision analysis was conducted to evaluate the clinical and economic outcomes in China of four competing strategies: postnatal IP alone (strategy IP), or in combination with perinatal LAM (strategy LAM + IP), LdT (strategy LdT + IP), or TDF (strategy TDF + IP). Antiviral treatments were administered from week 28 of gestation to 4 weeks after birth. Outcomes included treatment-related costs, number of infections, and quality-adjusted life years (QALYs). One- and two-way sensitivity analyses were performed to identify influential clinical and cost-related variables. Probabilistic sensitivity analyses were used to estimate the probabilities of being cost-effective for each strategy. Results. LdT + IP and TDF + IP averted the most infections and HBV-related deaths, and gained the most QALYs. IP and TDF + IP were dominated as they resulted in less or equal QALYs with higher associated costs. LdT + IP had an incremental $2,891 per QALY gained (95% CI [$932-$20,372]) compared to LAM + IP (GDP per capita for China in 2013 was $6,800). One-way sensitivity analyses showed that the cost-effectiveness of LdT + IP was only sensitive to the relative risk of HBV transmission comparing LdT + IP with LAM + IP. Probabilistic sensitivity analyses demonstrated that LdT + IP was cost-effective in most cases across willingness-to-pay range of $6,800 ∼ $20,400 per QALY gained. Conclusions. For pregnant HBV-infected women with high levels of viremia, supplemental use of LdT during late pregnancy combined with postnatal IP for infants is cost-effective in China.Entities:
Keywords: Cost-effective; Hepatitis b virus; Lamivudine; Perinatal transmission; Pregnancy; Telbivudine; Tenofovir
Year: 2016 PMID: 27042389 PMCID: PMC4811175 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.1709
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Decision tree model showing the four strategies for preventing perinatal hepatitis B transmission.
HBIG, hepatitis B immunoglobulin; IP, immunoprophylaxis; LAM, lamivudine; LdT, telbivudine; TDF, tenofovir.
Clinical variables for base-case and sensitivity analysis.
| Variable | Base case | Range | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Probability of perinatal hepatitis B transmission with IP | 11.7% | 2.8–42.3% | |
| Relative risk of perinatal hepatitis B transmission | |||
| Vaccination | 1.85 | 1.37–2.44 | |
| LAM + IP | 0.23 | 0.13–0.41 | |
| LdT + IP | 0.56 | 0.25–1 | |
| TDF + IP | 1 | 0.5–1 | |
| Compliance rate of IP | 44.0% | 37.6–86.0% | |
| Adherence to antiviral treatment during pregnancy | 98.4% | 80.0–100% | |
| Natural history parameters | |||
| Normal ALT to elevated ALT | 0.2% | 0.1–0.2% | |
| Normal ALT to HCC | 0.3% | 0.2–0.5% | |
| Chronic HBV with elevated ALT to compensated cirrhosis | 3.8% | 0.5–12.3% | |
| Chronic HBV with elevated ALT to HCC | 1.5% | 0.5–9.5% | |
| Durable virologic response while on treatment | 15.0% | 5.0–30.0% | |
| Receiving treatment with durable response | 50.0% | 0.0–100% | |
| Durable response relapse to elevated ALT | 7.0% | 2.0–15.0% | |
| Durable response relapse to HCC | 0.3% | 0.2–0.5% | |
| Compensated to decompensated cirrhosis | 7.0% | 3.0–10.0% | |
| Mortality from compensated cirrhosis | 4.8% | 2.0–13.1% | |
| Mortality from decompensated cirrhosis | 17.3% | 5.8–22.1% | |
| Cirrhosis to HCC | 3.3% | 1.0–11.3% | |
| Liver transplantation for decompensated cirrhosis | 1.5% | 0.0–40.0% | |
| Mortality from HCC | 40.0% | 32.0–47.3% | |
| Liver transplantation for HCC | 0.1% | 0.0–40.0% | |
| Mortality first year after liver transplantation | 15.0% | 7.5–30.0% | |
| Mortality second and subsequent years after liver transplantation | 1.5% | 0.8–3.0% | |
| Health-state utility weights for quality of life adjustments | |||
| Normal ALT | 1.00 | 0.95–1.00 | |
| Elevated ALT | 0.99 | 0.90–1.00 | |
| Durable response | 1.00 | 0.90–1.00 | |
| Compensated cirrhosis | 0.80 | 0.70–0.93 | |
| Decompensated cirrhosis | 0.60 | 0.50–0.70 | |
| HCC | 0.73 | 0.50–0.80 | |
| Liver transplantation | 0.86 | 0.70–0.90 |
Notes.
alanine aminotransferase
hepatitis B virus
hepatocellular carcinoma
immunoprophylaxis
lamivudine
telbivudine
tenofovir
Prevention efficacy of LAM was assumed to not be superior to LdT.
Cost variables for base-case and sensitivity analysis.
| Variable | Base case (USD) | Range (USD) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hepatitis B vaccination, three times | $3.0 | $1.5–6.0 | |
| Hepatitis B immunoglobulin administration | $40.0 | $20.0–80.0 | |
| LAM, daily | $2.5 | $1.3–5.0 | |
| LdT, daily | $3.6 | $1.8–7.2 | |
| TDF, daily | $8.7 | $4.4–17.4 | |
| Ratio of proportion of mothers with <6 to>6 log10 copies/mL HBV-DNA | 0.136 | 0.068–0.273 | |
| HBV-DNA quantification | $16.3 | $8.2–32.6 | |
| HBV-marker test | $3.3 | $1.6–6.6 | |
| Chronic hepatitis B, annual | $1,780 | $890–3,560 | |
| Compensated cirrhosis, annual | $2,759 | $1,380–5,518 | |
| Decompensated cirrhosis, annual | $5,130 | $2,565–10,260 | |
| Hepatocellular carcinoma, annual | $7,302 | $3,651–14,604 | |
| Liver transplantation, first year | $37,458 | $18,729–74,916 | |
| Liver transplantation, second and subsequent years, annual | $3,276 | $1,638–6,552 | |
| Discount rate, annual | 3% | 0–5% | – |
Notes.
hepatitis B virus
lamivudine
telbivudine
tenofovir
US Dollar
Administered from week 28 of gestation to 4 weeks after delivery.
50% of patients with durable response were assumed to continue receiving treatment.
Figure 2Effect of antiviral strategies on reducing perinatal hepatitis B transmission.
The area of each rectangle represents the proportion of pregnant women, and the density of dots represents the probability of perinatal transmission of HBV. The unit of HBV-DNA is copies/mL. HBeAg, hepatitis B e antigen; HBV, hepatitis B virus; IP, immunoprophylaxis; LAM, lamivudine; LdT, telbivudine; TDF, tenofovir.
Short-term outcomes.
| Strategy | Infections ( | Incremental infections averted ( | Cost (USD) | Incremental cost (USD) | ICER |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IP | 1,727 | – | $239,000 | – | – |
| LAM + IP | 284 | 1,443 | $3,078,568 | $2,839,568 | 1,967 |
| LdT + IP | 167 | 117 | $4,147,944 | $1,069,376 | 9,178 |
| TDF + IP | 167 | 0 | $9,105,960 | $4,958,016 | – |
Notes.
incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (US dollars per incremental infection averted)
immunoprophylaxis
lamivudine
telbivudine
tenofovir
US Dollar
Long-term outcomes.
| Strategy | HCC ( | HBV-related deaths ( | QALYs | Incremental QALYs | Cost (USD) | Incremental cost (USD) | ICER (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IP | 385 | 304 | 292,167 | – | $4,897,077 | – | Dominated |
| TDF + IP | 37 | 29 | 295,664 | – | $9,556,428 | – | Dominated |
| LAM + IP | 63 | 50 | 295,403 | – | $3,843,301 | – | – |
| LdT + IP | 37 | 29 | 295,664 | 261 | $4,598,412 | $755,111 | $2,891 (−$932∼$20,372) |
Notes.
confidence interval
hepatitis B virus
hepatocellular carcinoma
incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (US Dollar per quality-adjusted life year gained)
immunoprophylaxis
lamivudine
telbivudine
quality-adjusted life year
tenofovir
US Dollar
Figure 3Acceptability curves of the four strategies for preventing perinatal hepatitis B transmission.
Chinese gross domestic product per capita was approximately $6,800 in 2013. IP, immunoprophylaxis; LAM, lamivudine; LdT, telbivudine; TDF, tenofovir; USD, US Dollar; QALY, quality-adjusted life year.