| Literature DB >> 27647004 |
Christiaan Dolk1, Martin Eichner2,3, Robert Welte4, Anastassia Anastassopoulou4, Laure-Anne Van Bellinghen5, Barbara Poulsen Nautrup6, Ilse Van Vlaenderen5, Ruprecht Schmidt-Ott4,7, Markus Schwehm8, Maarten Postma9,10,11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Seasonal influenza infection is primarily caused by circulation of two influenza A strain subtypes and strains from two B lineages that vary each year. Trivalent influenza vaccine (TIV) contains only one of the two B-lineage strains, resulting in mismatches between vaccine strains and the predominant circulating B lineage. Quadrivalent influenza vaccine (QIV) includes both B-lineage strains. The objective was to estimate the cost-utility of introducing QIV to replace TIV in Germany.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27647004 PMCID: PMC5110585 DOI: 10.1007/s40273-016-0443-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacoeconomics ISSN: 1170-7690 Impact factor: 4.981
Fig. 1Conceptual model for e4Flu depicting inputs and outputs and the epidemiologic and economic pathways. QALYs quality-adjusted life-years
Mean costs (expressed in 2014 Euro levels) and outcomes (means of 1000 simulations) for TIV vs. QIV in one influenza season, undiscounted and extrapolated to the entire German population
| Annual results | TIV | (Per 100,000) | QIV | (Per 100,000) | Incremental |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vaccinated individuals | 25,216,739 | (31,020) | 25,216,739 | (31,020) | 0 |
| Clinical influenza cases | 6,884,896 | (8469) | 6,608,390 | (8129) | −276,506 |
| Healthy | 5,722,600 | (7040) | 5,506,204 | (6773) | −216,396 |
| At-riska | 1,162,296 | (1430) | 1,102,185 | (1356) | −60,111 |
| Influenza-related deaths | 4095 | (5) | 3833 | (5) | −262 |
| Healthy | 2069 | (3) | 1944 | (2) | −126 |
| At-riska | 2026 | (2) | 1890 | (2) | −136 |
| Medical visits (all influenza cases excl. complications) | 2,070,517 | (2547) | 1,986,786 | (2444) | −83,731 |
| Medical visits (complications) | 712,121 | (876) | 683,669 | (841) | −28,452 |
| Hospitalisations (complications) | 99,990 | (123) | 94,299 | (116) | −5690 |
| Payer costs breakdown | |||||
| Cost of vaccination | €576,942,623 | (€709,713) | €674,531,402 | (€829,759) | €97,588,779 |
| Child sickness benefit | €99,150,934 | (€121,968) | €95,770,313 | (€117,810) | −€3,380,621 |
| Reimbursed medical costs | €364,699,801 | (€448,627) | €346,111,953 | (€425,762) | −€18,587,848 |
| Societal costs breakdown | |||||
| Additional vaccination costs (transportation costs) | €228,715,820 | (€281,350) | €228,715,820 | (€281,350) | €0 |
| Non reimbursed medical costs | €53,457,496 | (€65,760) | €51,194,821 | (€62,976) | −€2,262,675 |
| Societal non-medical costs | €25,477,831 | (€31,341) | €24,444,614 | (€30,070) | −€1,033,217 |
| Indirect costsb | €3,970,028,653 | (€4,883,641) | €3,824,588,483 | (€4,704,731) | −€145,440,170 |
| Net payer costs | €1,040,793,358 | (€1,280,308) | €1,116,413,668 | (€1,373,331) | €75,620,310 |
| Net societal costs | €5,318,473,158 | (€6,542,399) | €5,245,357,406 | (€6,452,457) | −€73,115,752 |
| Total QALYs lost | 97,066 | (119) | 92,148 | (113) | −4918 |
| Total LYs lost | 58,007 | (71) | 54,509 | (67) | −3498 |
LYs life-years, QALYs quality-adjusted life-years, QIV quadrivalent influenza vaccine, TIV trivalent influenza vaccine
aThe “at-risk” population includes people at risk of complications due to influenza, including people with one or more chronic conditions, people working in the healthcare or public order section (adults only), as well as people living in residential care (elderly only) [8, 33]
bIndirect costs include productivity losses as a result of absenteeism and premature mortality
Cost-effectiveness results (means of 1000 simulations) for one influenza season, extrapolated to the entire German population, using different discount rates
| TIV | QIV | Incremental | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Base case results, discount rate (3.0 % costs, 1.5 % QALYs) | |||
| Vaccination costs | |||
| Societal perspectivea | €615,937,897 | €690,378,075 | €74,440,178 |
| Payer perspectiveb | €441,474,741 | €515,914,919 | €74,440,178 |
| Direct medical and non-medical cost of clinical influenza cases | |||
| Societal perspectivea | €417,779,534 | €398,244,190 | −€19,535,344 |
| Payer perspectiveb | €356,643,362 | €339,682,281 | −€16,961,081 |
| Indirect cost/productivity loss | |||
| Societal perspectivea | €3,032,379,910 | €2,919,581,753 | −€112,798,157 |
| Payer perspectiveb | €0 | €0 | €0 |
| Total costs | |||
| Societal perspectivea | €4,066,097,342 | €4,008,204,019 | −€57,893,323 |
| Payer perspectiveb | €798,118,103 | €855,597,200 | €57,479,097 |
| QALYs lost | 78,740 | 74,765 | −3975 |
| ICUR societal perspectivea | QIV dominates TIV | ||
| ICUR payer perspectiveb | €14,461 | ||
| Discount rate (0 % costs, 0 % QALYs) | |||
| QALYs lost | 97,066 | 92,148 | −4918 |
| ICUR societal perspectivea | QIV dominates TIV | ||
| ICUR payer perspectiveb | €15,375 | ||
| Discount rate (3 % costs, 3 % QALYs) | |||
| QALYs lost | 65,456 | 62,166 | −3287 |
| ICUR societal perspectivea | QIV dominates TIV | ||
| ICUR payer perspectiveb | €17,486 | ||
ICUR incremental cost-utility ratio, QALYs quality-adjusted life-years, QIV quadrivalent influenza vaccine, TIV trivalent influenza vaccine
aSocietal perspective = payer perspective costs + non-reimbursed medical costs + non-medical costs + indirect costs + societal costs related to vaccination
bPayer perspective = reimbursed medical costs + child sickness benefit (Kinderkrankengeld) costs
Fig. 2Tornado diagram: one-way sensitivity analyses from the healthcare payer perspective. ICUR incremental cost-utility ratio, P probability, QALY quality-adjusted life-year, RTI respiratory tract infection, VE vaccine efficacy, yr year. Asterisk ranges for probability of death following hospitalisation due to respiratory tract infection are (0–0.01), (0–0.02) and (0–0.37) for age groups 0–17, 18–64 and over 65, respectively. Cross for VE, the ranges are (0–0.82), (0–0.66), (0.55–0.78), (0.55–0.69) and (0.34–0.73) for the age groups 0–1, 2–5, 6–15, 16–64 and over 65, respectively
Fig. 3Probabilistic sensitivity analysis results from societal (blue) and healthcare payer (red) perspectives: a cost-effectiveness plane for QIV vs. TIV and b WTP curves for QIV vs. TIV. Every one of the 1000 points in Fig. 3a represents the average result of a batch of 100 4Flu simulations, combined with one simulation that used a random set of economic parameters. The dashed line represents an upper WTP threshold of €50,000 per QALY gained. QALY quality-adjusted life-year, QIV quadrivalent influenza vaccine, TIV trivalent influenza vaccine, WTP willingness-to-pay
| Replacing the trivalent influenza vaccine with the quadrivalent vaccine in Germany may reduce morbidity and mortality from influenza. |
| The quadrivalent vaccine provides more health benefits while being cost-saving, from the societal perspective. |
| The health gains achieved result in a cost-utility ratio of under €15,000/QALY from the healthcare payer perspective. |