| Literature DB >> 27663678 |
Silke Fernandes1, Elisa Sicuri2, Diawara Halimatou3, James Akazili4, Kalifa Boiang5, Daniel Chandramohan6, Sheikh Coulibaly7, Sory Ibrahim Diawara3, Kassoum Kayentao3,8, Feiko Ter Kuile8, Pascal Magnussen9, Harry Tagbor10, John Williams4, Arouna Woukeu6, Matthew Cairns6, Brian Greenwood6, Kara Hanson6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Emergence of high-grade sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP) resistance in parts of Africa has led to growing concerns about the efficacy of intermittent preventive treatment of malaria during pregnancy (IPTp) with SP. The incremental cost-effectiveness of intermittent screening and treatment (ISTp) with artemether-lumefantrine (AL) as an alternative strategy to IPTp-SP was estimated followed by a simulation of the effects on cost-effectiveness of decreasing efficacy of IPTp-SP due to SP resistance. The analysis was based on results from a multi-centre, non-inferiority trial conducted in West Africa.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27663678 PMCID: PMC5035479 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-016-1539-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Fig. 1The decision tree. The decision tree model illustrates the example for LBW. All numbers represent the results published in Tagbor et al. [20]. The same structure was used for moderate/severe anaemia and clinical malaria. IPTp-SP intermittent preventive treatment with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine; ISTp-AL intermittent screening and if positive followed by treatment with arthemether-lumefantrine; LBW low birth weight
Input variables for the cost consequence analysis and the base case and probabilistic cost-effectiveness analysis
| Parameter | Base case | Low | High | Distribution for PSA | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cost estimates | |||||
|
| |||||
| Time nurses take to provide 1 dose IPTp-SP in Ghana (min) | 18.00 | 15.54 | 20.46 | Gamma | Observational study of trial participants: (Ghana) |
| Time nurses take to provide 1 dose IPTp-SP in Malawi (min) | 3.55 | 2.58 | 4.52 | Gamma | Observational study of trial participants: (Malawi) |
| Time nurses take to provide 1 admin ISTp-AL in Ghana (min) | 13.67 | 9.87 | 17.46 | Gamma | Observational study of trial participants: (Ghana) |
| Time nurses take to provide 1 admin ISTp-AL in Ghana (min) | 24.29 | 21.43 | 27.16 | Gamma | Observational study of trial participants: (Ghana) |
| Time nurses take to provide 1 admin ISTp-AL in Malawi (min) | 5.67 | 4.91 | 6.44 | Gamma | Observational study of trial participants: (Malawi) |
| Time nurses take to provide 1 admin ISTp-AL in Malawi (min) | 12.65 | 11.52 | 13.78 | Gamma | Observational study of trial participants: (Malawi) |
| Number of administrations in IPTp-SP arm | 2.06 | – | – | Point estimate | [ |
| Number of administrations in ISTp-AL arm | 2.76 | – | – | Point estimate | [ |
| % of administrations of ISTp with a positive RDT result | 24.7 % | Point estimate | [ | ||
| Nurses’ monthly cost of labour, 95 % CI (US$ 2012) | 346.33 | 164.83 | 527.84 | Gamma | Countries MoHa |
|
| |||||
| Average SP price per administration, 95 % CI (US$ 2012) | 0.20 | 0.16 | 0.27 | Lognormal | International procurement databasesb |
| Average AL price per administration, 95 % CI (US$ 2012) | 2.39 | 1.71 | 3.06 | Lognormal | International procurement databasesb |
| Average RDT price per administration, 95 % CI (US$ 2012) | 0.81 | 0.58 | 0.90 | Lognormal | International procurement databasesb |
|
| |||||
| Incremental days in hospital comparing LBW versus NBW (days) | 0.64 | 0.40 | 0.89 | Normal | Trial post partum follow up data |
| Cost per paediatric IP day (excluding medical supplies) (US$ 2012) | 63.46 | 31.73 | 95.19 | Gamma | Health facility costings (Ghana, Mali) |
| Cost per OP visit (excluding medical supplies) (US$ 2012) | 11.76 | 8.45 | 15.06 | Gamma | Health facility costings (Ghana, Mali) |
| Cost per IP day (excluding medical supplies) (US$ 2012) | 35.25 | 17.63 | 52.88 | Gamma | Health facility costings (Ghana, Mali) |
| Daly calculations | |||||
| Discount rate r | 0.03 | 0.00 | 0.05 | Point estimate | Assumption |
| Average age (years)c | 20.40 | – | – | Point estimate | [ |
| Life expectancy women aged 20–24 years | 50.12 | 45.11 | 55.13 | Lognormal | GBD study 2010d [ |
| Life expectancy at birth | 61.56 | 56.86 | 66.31 | Lognormal | GBD study 2010d [ |
| Length disability—malaria during pregnancy (3.5 days, range 2–6) | 0.010 | 0.005 | 0.016 | Gamma | Assumption |
| Length disability—malaria related anaemia (21 days, range 14–42) | 0.06 | 0.04 | 0.12 | Gamma | Price et al. [ |
| Length disability—LBW (years) | 57.96 | 52.91 | 64.80 | Lognormal | GBD 2010 study [ |
| Disability weight infectious disease severe acute episode (95 % CI) | 0.21 | 0.14 | 0.30 | Lognormal | GBD 2010 study [ |
| Disability weight maternal anaemia: moderate (95 % CI) | 0.06 | 0.04 | 0.09 | Lognormal | GBD 2010 study [ |
| Disability weight LBW | 0.11 | – | – | Point estimate | GBD 2004 update (data from 1990) [ |
| Mortality estimates | |||||
| LBW attributable neonatal mortality risk % | 6.93 | 4.36 | 9.50 | Beta | Marchant et al. [ |
| CFR malaria during pregnancy % | 0.0033 | 0.0026 | 0.0045 | Beta | Sicuri et al. [ |
| CFR moderate/severe anaemia in pregnancy % | 0.01 | – | – | Beta | Brabin et al. [ |
| Measures of effect (trial conducted in Primi- and secundigravidae only) | |||||
|
| |||||
| LBW risk IPTp-SP arm per 1000 women | 151.2 | 136.8 | 166.8 | Beta | [ |
| LBW risk ISTp-AL arm per 1000 women | 155.8 | 141.3 | 171.5 | Beta | [ |
|
| |||||
| Moderate/severe anaemia risk at last ANC visit IPTp-SP arm per 1000 women | 16.9 | 11.6 | 24.7 | Beta | [ |
| Moderate/severe anaemia risk at last ANC visit ISTp-AL arm per 1000 women | 23.1 | 16.8 | 31.7 | Beta | [ |
|
| |||||
| 0 episode clinical malaria IPTp-SP arm per 1000 women | 932.41 | 922.26 | 941.33 | Dirichlet | [ |
| 1 episode clinical malaria IPTp-SP arm per 1000 women | 61.99 | 53.45 | 71.78 | Dirichlet | [ |
| 2 episodes clinical malaria IPTp-SP arm per 1000 women | 5.6 | 3.38 | 9.27 | Dirichlet | [ |
| 3 episodes clinical malaria IPTp-SP arm per 1000 women | 0.4 | 0.36 | 0.44 | Dirichlet | [ |
| 0 episode clinical malaria ISTp-AL arm per 1000 women | 899.85 | 887.88 | 910.67 | Dirichlet | [ |
| 1 episode clinical malaria ISTp-AL arm per 1000 women | 84.08 | 74.14 | 95.21 | Dirichlet | [ |
| 2 episodes clinical malaria ISTp-AL arm per 1000 women | 14.95 | 10.98 | 20.32 | Dirichlet | [ |
| 3 episodes clinical malaria ISTp-AL arm per 1000 women | 0.37 | 0.05 | 2.65 | Dirichlet | [ |
| Measures of effect from cochrane review used for modelling of decreasing SP efficacy in IPTp arm | |||||
| Relative risk of LBW comparing IPTp-SP versus none or placebo | 0.81 | 0.67 | 0.99 | n/a | [ |
| Relative risk of sev/mod anaemia comparing IPTp-SP versus none or placebo | 0.60 | 0.47 | 0.75 | n/a | [ |
| Relative risk of antenatal parasitaemia comparing IPTp-SP versus none or placebo | 0.38 | 0.24 | 0.59 | n/a | [ |
Parameters are shown for all countries where the clinical trial was conducted in [32] (Burkina Faso, Ghana, Mali and The Gambia)
ANC antenatal care; CFR case fatality rate; DALY disability adjusted life years; HCW health care worker; IPTp-SP intermittent preventive treatment with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine; ISTp-AL intermittent screening and if positive followed by treatment with arthemether-lumefantrine; LBW low birth weight; MoH Ministry of Health; 95 % CI 95 % confidence interval
aSalary scale and an average allowance package for nurses from Ministry of Health in Burkina Faso, Ghana, Mali and The Gambia for 2012
bCost for dose of SP, AL and per RDT was calculated accounting for 5 % wastage, 10 % insurance and freight and 10 % in country transport
cAverage age was used from the trial
dThe life expectancy was analysed from the Global burden of disease 2010 database for the subgroups of interest (i.e. female only, age 20–24, trial countries and both gender, at birth, trial countries respectively)
Cost consequence analysis
| IPTp-SP | ISTp-AL | ||
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Health provider excluding consequencesb (US$ 2012) | 1631.84 (1100.11–2316.97) | 5778.77 (4701.65–7039.15)a |
| Health provider including consequencesb (US$ 2012) | 9006.54 (5610.30–13,680.56) | 13,972.79 (10,199.65–18,983.86)a | |
|
| LBW | 151 (137–167) | 156 (141–172) |
| severe/moderate anaemia | 17 (12–25) | 23 (17–32) | |
| clinical malaria (total episodes)c | 74 (61–92) | 115 (96–144) | |
|
| Placental malaria: active infection (acute and chronic) | 245 (224–265) | 242 (222–262) |
| Dizziness | 46 (38–54) | 25 (19–31) | |
| Sleeplessness | 13 (9–17) | 7 (4–10) | |
| Weakness | 30 (24–37) | 18 (13–23) | |
| Nausea | 22 (16–28) | 13 (9–17) | |
| Vomiting | 45 (37–53) | 26 (20–32) | |
|
| Intrinsic value of giving | ||
| Value to | |||
| Value of | |||
| Deprivation of treatment for | |||
DALY disability adjusted life years; IPTp-SP intermittent preventive treatment with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine; ISTp-AL intermittent screening followed by treatment with artemether-lumefantrine; LBW low birth weight
aAt 24.7 % of administration where RDT showed a positive result
bCosts from consequences = ∑ short term costs LBW baby; costs mod/sev anaemia episode; costs MiP episode
cClinical malaria defined as illness + positive slide at an unscheduled visit
Itemized cost results
| Type of cost | Cost parameter | Cost in US$ 2012, mean (95 % CI) |
|---|---|---|
| Intervention cost | Average SP price per administrationa | 0.2 (0.16–0.25) |
| Average AL price per administrationa | 2.39 (1.71–3.06) | |
| Average RDT price per administrationa | 0.81 (0.58–0.90) | |
| HCW time cost per dose of IPTp-SP | 0.59 (0.33–0.91) | |
| HCW time cost per administration of ISTp-AL if screened negative | 0.64 (0.36–1.00) | |
| HCW time cost per administration of ISTp-AL if screened positive | 0.84 (0.47–1.31) | |
| Total cost per administration of IPTp-SP (HCW time and commodity cost) | 0.79 (0.53–1.12) | |
| Total cost per administration of ISTp-AL if screened negative (HCW time and commodity cost) | 1.45 (1.12–1.85) | |
| Total cost per administration of ISTp-AL if screened positive (HCW time and commodity cost) | 4.06 (3.29–4.97) | |
| Health provider costs excluding medical supplies | Cost per OP visit | 11.78 (9.18–14.68) |
| Cost per IP day adult | 35.27 (19.99–55.07) | |
| Cost per paediatric IP day (nursery) | 63.51 (36.3–99.27) | |
| Health provider costs of consequences | Total average short term cost per LBW baby | 40.93 (19.52–71.19) |
| Total average cost per moderate/severe anaemia case | 10.15 (6.76–15.17) | |
| Total average cost per clinical malaria case | 13.71 (6.12–24.65) |
AL arthemether-lumefantrine; HCW health care worker; IP inpatient; IPTp-SP intermittent preventive treatment with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine; ISTp-AL intermittent screening and if positive followed by treatment with artemether-lumefantrine; LBW low birth weight; OP outpatient; SP sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine
aIncluding freight, insurance, wastage and in country transport
Cost effectiveness analysis
| Deterministic results (base case) | |
| DALYs LBW averted | −22.64 |
| DALYs mod/sev anaemia averted | −1.63 |
| DALYs MiP averted | −3.56 |
| Total DALY IPTp-SP | 755.1 |
| Total DALY ISTp-AL | 782.93 |
| Total cost IPTp-SP (US$ 2012)a | 9037.84 |
| Total cost ISTp-AL (US$ 2012)a | 13,966.84 |
| Δ Costs (US$ 2012)a | 4929.00 |
| Δ DALYs | −27.83 |
| | − |
| Probabilistic results | |
| DALYs LBW averted | −23.15 (−128.35 to 80.71) |
| DALYs mod/sev anaemia averted | −1.63 (−4.35 to 0.94) |
| DALYs MiP averted | −3.58 (−5.69 to 1.83) |
| Total DALY IPTp-SP | 753.55 (631.07 to 895.88) |
| Total DALY ISTp-AL | 781.91 (657.92 to 928.64) |
| Total cost IPTp-SP (US$ 2012)a | 9006.54 (5610.30 to 13,680.56) |
| Total cost ISTp-AL (US$ 2012)a | 13,972.79 (10,199.65 to 18,983.86) |
| Δ Costs (US$ 2012)a | 4966.25 (3703.53 to 6376.83) |
| Δ DALYs | −28.36 (−134.18 to 75.78) |
| | − |
aIncluding the costs from health consequences caused by malaria during pregnancy
Fig. 2Cost effectiveness planes: the graphs display the results of two different Monte Carlo simulations with 10’000 iterations each using the value ranges and distributions specified in Table 1. The different coloured lines illustrate the median and three willingness-to-pay (WTP) thresholds. WTP threshold 1 of US$ 861.33 is the GDP/capita averaged over the four countries. WTP threshold 2 and 3 represent the original thresholds defined by WHO in 1993 as highly attractive and attractive, both inflated to US$ 2012. a shows the results including the costs occurring from the consequences of malaria during pregnancy and b excluding these costs
Fig. 3Simulation results: cost effectiveness plane at SP efficacy level of 50 % with a bed net coverage of 47.7 % [37] and with costs from consequences included. a shows the trial results replicated from Fig. 2a for comparison purpose, b, c show the simulation results for the assumption that bed nets bear 1/2 and 2/3 respectively, of the predicted burden of LBW, severe/moderate anaemia and clinical malaria
Fig. 4Simulation results: cost effectiveness plane at SP efficacy level of 0 % with a bed net coverage of 47.7 % [37] and with costs from consequences included. a shows the trial results replicated from Fig. 2a for comparison purpose, b, c show the simulation results for the assumption that bed nets bear 1/2 and 2/3 respectively, of the predicted burden of LBW, severe/moderate anaemia and clinical malaria
Threshold modelling for decreasing SP efficacy: Efficacy levels of IPTp-SP at which ISTp-AL becomes cost effective stratified by (1) two assumptions made on burden prevented by bed net use at a bed net coverage of 47.7 % and (2) willingness to pay threshold
| Full costs of RDT and AL | Costs of RDT and AL halved | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bed nets bear 1/2 of extrapolated burden | Bed nets bear 2/3 of extrapolated burden | Bed nets bear 1/2 of extrapolated burden | Bed nets bear 2/3 of extrapolated burden | |
| WTP 1 = US$ 861.33/DALY averted | Between 72 and 73 % | Between 69 and 70 % | Between 74 and 75 % | Between 71 and 72 % |
| WTP 2 = US$ 238.33/DALY averted | Between 63 and 64 % | Between 59 and 60 % | Between 68 and 69 % | Between 65 and 66 % |
| WTP3 = US$ 39.72/DALY averted | Between 19 and 20 % | Between 12 and 13 % | Between 41 and 42 % | Between 35 and 36 % |
Results are shown for the full costs of RDT and AL as well as for the costs reduced by 50 %
The first column shows the three willingness to pay (WTP) thresholds
The first row indicates if the full costs for RDT and AL were used or if they were halved
The second row of the table show the two assumptions made regarding burden prevented by bed net use with bed nets bearing 1/2 and 2/3 respectively of the extrapolated burden of LBW, severe/moderate anemia and clinical malaria when IPTp-SP efficacy decreases Results shown here are based on a 47.7 % bed net coverage level