| Literature DB >> 27981151 |
Femke Jansen1, Valesca van Zwieten1, Veerle M H Coupé2, C René Leemans1, Irma M Verdonck-de Leeuw3.
Abstract
Several psychosocial care interventions have been found effective in improving psychosocial outcomes in cancer patients. At present, there is increasingly being asked for information on the value for money of this type of intervention. This review therefore evaluates current evidence from studies investigating cost-effectiveness or cost-utility of psychosocial care in cancer patients. A systematic search was conducted in PubMed and Web of Science yielding 539 unique records, of which 11 studies were included in the study. Studies were mainly performed in breast cancer populations or mixed cancer populations. Studied interventions included collaborative care (four studies), group interventions (four studies), individual psychological support (two studies), and individual psycho-education (one study). Seven studies assessed the cost-utility of psychosocial care (based on quality-adjusted-life-years) while three studies investigated its cost-effectiveness (based on profile of mood states [mood], Revised Impact of Events Scale [distress], 12-Item Health Survey [mental health], or Fear of Progression Questionnaire [fear of cancer progression]). One study did both. Costs included were intervention costs (three studies), intervention and direct medical costs (five studies), or intervention, direct medical, and direct nonmedical costs (three studies). In general, results indicated that psychosocial care is likely to be cost-effective at different, potentially acceptable, willingness-to-pay thresholds. Further research should be performed to provide more clear information as to which psychosocial care interventions are most cost-effective and for whom. In addition, more research should be performed encompassing potential important cost drivers from a societal perspective, such as productivity losses or informal care costs, in the analyses.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer patient; cost-effectiveness; cost-utility; economic evaluation; psychosocial care; supportive care
Year: 2016 PMID: 27981151 PMCID: PMC5123498 DOI: 10.4103/2347-5625.182930
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Asia Pac J Oncol Nurs ISSN: 2347-5625
Search strategy
| PubMed (MedLine) | Web of Science |
|---|---|
| Neoplasms[MeSH] OR neoplasm[ti] OR Cancer[ti] OR “chronic cancer patients”[ti] OR “cancer survivors”[ti]) AND (((cost* OR economic[ti]) AND (analysis OR analyses OR effectiveness OR utility OR evaluation OR benefit)) OR (cost-analysis OR cost-analyses OR cost-effectiveness OR cost-utility OR cost-benefit OR cost-evaluation OR cost-effective*)) AND (“supportive care”[ti] OR “psychosocial care”[ti] OR “psychological care”[ti] OR “after care”[ti] OR anxiety[ti] OR depression[ti] OR social[ti] OR psychosocial[ti] OR cognitive[ti] OR stress[ti] OR mood[ti] OR pain[ti] | TITLE: (neoplasm OR Cancer OR chronic cancer patients OR cancer survivors) AND TITLE: (supportive care OR psychosocial care OR psychological care OR after care OR anxiety OR depression OR social OR psychosocial OR cognitive OR stress OR mood OR pain) AND TITLE: (cost* OR economic) AND TITLE: (analysis OR analyses OR effectiveness OR utility OR evaluation OR benefit OR cost-analysis OR cost-analyses OR cost-effectiveness OR cost-utility OR cost-benefit OR cost-evaluation OR cost-effective*) |
MeSH: Medical subject heading; ti: Title
Figure 1Flow diagram
Characteristics of the included studies
| Characteristics | Design | Study population | Treatment | Follow-up | Outcome(s)a | Perspective | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lemieux | RCT | Women with metastatic breast cancer ( | Weekly supportive-expressive psychosocial group therapy plus standard care. Patients were asked to attend group sessions for at least 1 year | 2-year (mean) | Mood (POMS) | Healthcare perspective, including intervention costs and direct medical costs | Intervention costs were on average $1394 per patient Psychosocial group therapy was more costly ($+3526, NS) and more effective (POMS effect size of 0.32, significant) than usual care |
| Mandelblatt | RCT | Women treated with surgery for invasive breast cancer four to 6 weeks ago ( | An educational video addressing re-entry challenges in physical health, emotional well-being, interpersonal relations and life perspectives plus the control booklet Individual psycho-educational counseling (one face-to-face and one telephone session) plus the educational video and control-booklet | 6-month | Distress (IES-R) | Societal perspective, including intervention costs (which includes patient opportunity costs) and direct medical costs | Intervention costs were $11 (control), $26 (video) and $134 (video plus counseling) per participant Individual counselling was most costly, while equally effective as the educational video condition and therefore dominated. The educational video condition was more costly ($+15) and more effective (IES-R incremental effect −0.002, NS) than a booklet control condition |
| Strong | RCT | Mixed cancer patients with a prognosis >6 months and screened for major depressive disorder (HADS ≥15 and major depressive disorder assessed in a Structured Clinical Interview) ( | Nurse-delivered DCPC comprising education about depression and its treatment (including antidepressant medication), problem-solving treatment, and communication with each patient’s oncologist and general practitioner. A maximum of 10 individual sessions of 45 min were provided over 3 months followed by additional sessions when necessary | 6-month | QALYs (EQ-5D) | Healthcare perspective, including intervention costs and direct medical costs | Intervention costs were on average $487 (£262) per patient DCPC was more costly ($+623 (£335), significant) and more effective (incremental QALYs +0.063, significant) than usual care |
| Sabariego | RCT | Mixed cancer patients with increased fear of cancer progression and treated with a 3-week inpatient rehabilitation program ( | Four sessions of 90 min of CBT in addition to the standard rehabilitation program | 1-year | Fear of progression (FoP-Q); Mental health (SF-12 mental) | Societal perspective, including intervention costs, direct medical costs, direct nonmedical and indirect nonmedical costs Indirect nonmedical costs were not included in the CEA analyses | Incremental intervention costs were on average $57 (€47) per patient (or $345 (€282) per group) |
| Arving | RCT | Breast cancer patients about to start adjuvant treatment ( | Individual psychological support from a nurse trained in psychological techniques (INS) | 2-year | QALYs (EORTC QLQ-C30 mapped into EQ-5D) | Healthcare perspective, including intervention costs and direct medical costs | Intervention costs were per patient on average $690 (€560) for the INS group and $805 (€653) for the IPS group INS as well as IPS were less costly ($−8786 (€−7130) and $−6630 (€−5381), both significant) and more effective (incremental QALYs +0.09, NS and +0.16, both NS) compared to usual care INS and IPS were dominant compared to usual care |
| Choi Yoo | RCT | Mixed cancer patients with clinical significant depression (PHQ-9 ≥10 and endorsement of depressed mood and/or anhedonia) or pain (definitely or possibly cancer-related and BPI worst pain score ≥6) ( | Centralized telecare management for pain and depression coupled with automated home-based symptom monitoring | 1-year | QALYs (disease free days; SF-12 converted to SF-6D; modified EQ-5D and a VAS scale) | Healthcare perspective, including intervention costs | Intervention costs were on average $953 (all patients) or $1189 (depressed patients only) per patient Centralized telecare management was more costly ($+953) and more effective (incremental QALYs +0.088, significant (EQ-5D) or +0.013 (SF-12)) than usual care |
| Walker | Decision analytic model | Hypothetical patient diagnosed with cancer (female 63-years) attending specialist cancer outpatients services (base-case) | Systematic identification for major depressive disorder (HADS ≥15 and major depressive disorder assessed in a Structured Clinical Interview), followed by a nurse-delivered DCPC. DCPC comprised education about depression and its treatment (including antidepressant medication), problem-solving treatment, and communication with each patient’s oncologist and general practitioner, in addition to usual care. A maximum of 10 individual sessions of 45 min was provided over 4 months, followed by additional sessions when necessary | 5-year | QALYs | Healthcare perspective, including intervention costs | Intervention costs were per patient $676 (£464) for the intervention group and $532 (£365) for the control group DCPC was more costly ($+144 (£99)) and more effective (incremental QALYs +0.009) than usual care |
| Mewes | Decision analytic model | Hypothetical cohort of 1000 breast cancer patients with matched clinical characteristics as in the RCT | A 6-week CBT program of 90 min each A 12-week home-based exercise program, individually tailored during an intake with a physiotherapistb | 5-year | QALYs (SF-36 converted to EQ-5D) | Healthcare perspective, including intervention costs and direct medical costs | Intervention costs were $247 (€190) per patient |
| Lengacher | RCT | Breast cancer patients who completed treatment within 2 years prior to study enrollment ( | A 6-week mindfulness stress reduction program, which consisted of 2-hour group sessions once a week | 12-week | QALYs (SF-12) | Societal perspective, including intervention costs and direct nonmedical costs (i.e., patient opportunity costs) | Intervention costs were $666 per patients |
| Chatterton | RCT | Mixed cancer patients with elevated levels of distress (score ≥4 on the distress thermometer) ( | Psychologist-led, individual cognitive behavioral intervention (PI) (maximum 5 sessions) | 12-month | QALYs (AQOL-8D) | Healthcare perspective, including intervention costs, direct medical costs and direct nonmedical costs (e.g., costs of support services) | Intervention costs were on average $60 (NI) and $181 or $202 (PI) per patient |
| Duarte | RCT | Mixed cancer patients with a prognosis >12 months and screened for major depressive disorder (HADS ≥15 and major depressive disorder assessed in a Structured Clinical Interview) ( | Nurse-delivered DCPC comprising education and its treatment (including antidepressant medication), problem-solving treatment, and communication with each patient’s oncologist and general practitioner, in addition to usual care. A maximum of 10 individual sessions of 45 min were provided over a 4 months period, followed by some additional sessions when necessary | 48-week | QALYs (EQ-5D) | Healthcare perspective, including intervention costs and direct medical costs | Intervention costs were on average $935 (£642) per patient |
aOnly those outcomes (i.e., psychosocial outcomes or quality adjusted life-years) that were used in this systematic review are presented, bOnly results of the cognitive behavioral therapy group are presented (i.e., results regarding the exercise program are not presented). RCT: Randomized controlled trial; POMS: Profile of mood states; NS: Not significant; ICER: Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; IES-R: Revised Impact of Events Scale; CEA: Cost-effectiveness analyses; HADS: Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale; DCPC: Depression care for people with cancer; QALYs: Quality-adjusted life-years; EQ-5D: EuroQol 5-dimensions; CBT: Cognitive behavioral therapy; SET: Supportive-experimental therapy; FoP-Q: Fear of Progression Questionnaire; SF-12: 12-item Health Survey; INS: Individual psychosocial support from a trained nurse; IPS: Individual psychosocial support from a psychologist; EORTC QLQ-C30: The European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire-Core 30-questions; PHQ: Patient Health Questionnaire; BPI: Brief Pain Inventory; SF-6D: Short-Form 6-dimensions; VAS: Visual analog scale; SF-36: Medical Outcomes Study 36-Item Short-Form Health Survey; PI: Psychologist-led, individual cognitive behavioral intervention; NI: Nurse-led, single-session self-management intervention; AQOL-8D: Quality of life - eight dimension; BSI: Brief Symptom Index
Permutation matrix
| Incremental effectiveness | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Incremental costs | More effective | Equal effective | Less effective | |
| More costly | Lemieux | |||
| Equal in costs | ||||
| Less costly | Arving | Sabariego | ||
Quality assessment of the included studies
| Items | Lemieux | Mandelblatt | Strong | Sabariego | Arving | Choi Yoo | Walker | Mewes | Lengacher | Chatterton | Duarte | % yes or NA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Was a well-defined question posed? | No | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | 73 |
| Was a description of the alternatives given? And were all relevant alternatives omitted? | Yes | Partly | Yes | Partly | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Partly | Yes | 73 |
| Was the effectiveness established? | Partly | Partly | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Unclear | Partly | Yes | 64 |
| Were all relevant and important costs and consequences identified for each alternative? | No | No | No | Yes | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | 9 |
| Were costs and consequences measured accurately in appropriate units? | Partly | No | Partly | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Partly | Yes | Yes | 55 |
| Costs and consequences valued credibly? | Yes | Yes | Partly | Yes | Yes | Partly | Yes | No | Partly | Yes | Yes | 64 |
| Were costs and consequences adjusted for differential timing? | No | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | Yes | Yes | NA | NA | NA | 91 |
| Was an incremental analysis of costs and consequences of alternatives performed? | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | 100 |
| Was allowance made for uncertainty for the estimates of costs and consequences? | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | 91 |
| Did the presentation and discussion of study results include all relevant issues? | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | 73 |
| Total | 5 | 6 | 7 | 7, 5 | 9 | 7, 5 | 9 | 8 | 6 | 8 | 9 |
NA: Not applicable