| Literature DB >> 28035193 |
Isabelle Feldhaus1, Amnesty E LeFevre1, Chandra Rai2, Jona Bhattarai2, Deirdre Russo3, Barbara Rawlins4, Pushpa Chaudhary5, Kusum Thapa2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In Nepal, pre-eclampsia/eclampsia (PE/E) causes an estimated 21% of maternal deaths annually and contributes to adverse neonatal birth outcomes. Calcium supplementation has been shown to reduce the risk of PE/E for pregnant women and preterm birth. This study presents findings from a cost-effectiveness analysis of a pilot project, which provided calcium supplementation through the public sector to pregnant women during antenatal care for PE/E prevention as compared to existing PE/E management in Nepal.Entities:
Keywords: Antenatal care; Calcium; Cost-effectiveness; Eclampsia; Low-income countries; Magnesium sulfate; Maternal mortality; Micronutrients; Nepal; Pre-eclampsia
Year: 2016 PMID: 28035193 PMCID: PMC5192578 DOI: 10.1186/s12962-016-0062-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cost Eff Resour Alloc ISSN: 1478-7547
Total costs and inputs in 2014 USD
| Indicator | Value | Distribution for PSA |
|---|---|---|
| Total fixed program costs | ||
| Start-up costs | ||
| Capital | $33,884.48 | – |
| Recurrent costs | $10,919.61 | – |
| Total | $44,804.09 | – |
| Implementation costs | ||
| Recurrent costs | $72,827.94 | – |
| Blood pressure instrument | $24.25 | – |
| Total (not incl. variable costs, listed below) | $72,852.19 | – |
| Total program costs (per individual) | $0.44 | |
| Variable costs per individual | ||
| Urine test (sample bottle + dipstick) | $0.07 | Lognormal |
| Calcium supply (per bottle, 100 tablets) | $0.69 | Lognormal |
| MgSO4 treatment regimen | $13.00 [ | Lognormal |
| Mean daily bed fee for maternal hospitalization | $4.21 | Lognormal |
| Other maternal hospitalization costs | $31.66 | Lognormal |
| Mean daily bed fee for newborn hospitalization | $8.25 | Lognormal |
| Other newborn hospitalization costs | $21.11 | Lognormal |
| Mean indirect costs per individual | ||
| Daily wage in district | $3.36 [ | Lognormal |
| Round trip transportation for hospitalization | $29.67 [ | Lognormal |
| Mean duration of hospital stay | ||
| Normal, healthy case | ||
| Vaginal birth | 1 day | – |
| Cesarean section | 4.3 days | – |
| Live newborn | 1 day | – |
| PE/E case | ||
| Vaginal birth | 6 days | – |
| Cesarean section | 10 days | – |
| Live newborn | 7 days | – |
Source: Jhpiego/MCHIP
Background epidemiological and program data
| Parameter | Base case | Low | High | Distribution for PSA |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maternal careseeking | ||||
| ANC, at least one visit | 84.8% [ | 63.60% | 100% | Beta |
| Facility deliveries in government sector | 26.0% [ | 19.5% | 32.5% | Beta |
| Screening procedures | ||||
| Blood pressure | 86.4% [ | 64.80% | 100% | Beta |
| Urine sample | 55.9% [ | 41.9% | 69.9% | Beta |
| Blood sample | 45.3% [ | 34.0% | 56.63% | Beta |
| Eclampsia epidemiology | ||||
| Incidence of eclampsia | 4.30% [ | 3.23% | 5.38% | Beta |
| Eclampsia as direct maternal cause of death | 21.0% [ | 15.8% | 26.3% | Beta |
| Mean age of eclampsia patients | 23.4 [ | 17.7 [ | 29.2 [ | – |
| Treatment | ||||
| MgSO4 for PE/E management | 68.9%a | 51.7% | 95.8% | Beta |
| Cesarean delivery | 55.31% [ | 41.5% | 69.1% | Beta |
| Maternal risk ratios for PE/E | ||||
| Calcium supplementation | 0.45 [ | 0.31 [ | 0.65 [ | Beta |
| MgSO4, standard regimen | 0.19 [ | 0.14 [ | 0.24 [ | Beta |
| Cesarean delivery | 0.55 [ | 0.41 [ | 0.69 [ | Beta |
| Still birth rates | ||||
| Vaginal birth | 1.37%a | 1.03% | 1.71% | Beta |
| Cesarean delivery | 0.43%a | 0.32% | 0.54% | Beta |
| Vaginal birth among PE/E cases | 14.3%a | 10.7% | 17.9% | Beta |
| Cesarean delivery among PE/E cases | 9.77%a | 7.33% | 12.2% | Beta |
| Disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) | ||||
| DALYs averted per individual (maternal) | 24.9b | 15.6c | 31.8d | – |
| DALYs averted per individual (newborn) | 29.0b | 16.4c | 32.3d | – |
| Pilot Program Data, Dailekh District, 2013 | ||||
| Maternal careseeking | ||||
| ANC, at least one visit | 94.6% | 71.0% | 100% | Beta |
| Calcium regimen compliance | ||||
| Full compliance | 67.3% | 50.5% | 84.1% | – |
| Partial or low compliance | 32.7% | 24.5% | 40.9% | – |
| Gestational age among women receiving calcium | ||||
| 4–5 months (300 calcium tablets) | 82.2% | 61.7% | 95% | – |
| 6–7 months (200 calcium tablets) | 13.8% | 25.6% | 2.5% | – |
| 8–9 months (100 calcium tablets) | 4.0% | 12.8% | 2.5% | – |
| Screening procedures | ||||
| Blood pressure | 98% | 73.5% | 100% | Beta |
| Urine test | 97% | 72.8% | 100% | Beta |
aSource: Jhpiego/MCHIP
bDiscount rate 3% + no age weighting
cDiscount rate 6% + age weighting
dDiscount rate 3% + age weighting
Fig. 1a Partial (two comparator arms shown) decision tree model of calcium supplementation program in Nepal. The segment in red is magnified. b Magnified inset: Decision tree model of calcium supplementation program for pregnant women in Nepal
Summary of total costs and effects by comparator
| Condition | Total costs | Total effects |
|---|---|---|
| No treatment | $26.82 | 52.58 |
| MgSO4 | $26.98 | 52.68 |
| MgSO4 + calcium | $29.29 | 52.71 |
Summary of incremental cost-effectiveness ratios
| Comparison | Deterministic calculations | Probabilistic analyses | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total incremental costs | Total incremental DALYs averted | Incremental cost per DALY averted | Total incremental costs | Lower bound | Upper bound | Total incremental DALYs averted | Lower bound | Upper bound | Incremental cost per DALY averted | Lower bound | Upper bound | |
| MgSO4a vs. | $0.16 | 0.05 | $3.28 | $0.17 | $0.13 | $0.20 | $0.05 | $0.05 | $0.05 | $3.40 | $2.60 | $4.00 |
| MgSO4 + calcium vs. | $2.47 | 0.13 | $18.47 | $2.45 | $2.40 | $2.56 | $0.14 | $0.14 | $0.05 | $17.50 | $17.14 | $19.69 |
| MgSO4 + calcium vs. | $2.31 | 0.08 | $27.29 | $2.28 | $2.27 | $2.36 | $0.09 | $0.09 | $0.08 | $25.33 | $25.22 | $29.50 |
aStandard of care
Fig. 2Cost-effectiveness plane showing mean estimates for 10,000 iterations of total costs and effects
Fig. 3Incremental cost-effectiveness scatter plot for comparison of three alternatives. Gray line indicates 95% confidence interval. a (i) calcium program vs. (ii) standard of care; b (i) calcium program vs. (iii) no treatment; c (ii) standard of care vs. (iii) no treatment
Fig. 4Tornado diagram (net benefits) illustrating the key drivers of cost-effectiveness. The base ICER is set at $26.84 per DALY averted in the diagram. Varying rate of facility delivery resulted in the greatest change in ICER, while varying hospitalization costs for PE/E cases resulted in the least change
Fig. 5Cost-effectiveness acceptability curves for three alternatives. a Calcium program (blue) vs. standard of care (red); b Calcium program (blue) vs. no treatment (red); c Standard of care (blue) vs. no treatment (red). The curves represent the percentage of iterations that were cost-effective (y-axis) for varying willingness-to-pay thresholds in 2014 US$ up to a ceiling $100. Findings suggest that the addition of calcium to the existing standard of care (MGSO4) is favored above a WTP threshold of ~$30 USD. When compared against a scenario of no treatment (B), MgSO4 + calcium is the preferred strategy for WTP thresholds of $25 or more. When considered independently of calcium supplementation, MGSO4 vs. no treatment is considered good value for money above WTP thresholds of $10 USD
Cost per DALY averted associated with low-cost high-priority interventions recommended for South Asia
| Low-cost high-priority interventions recommended for South Asia | Mean cost per DALY averted (USD) |
|---|---|
| Childhood immunization | $8.00 [ |
| Additional coverage of traditional Expanded Program on Immunization | |
|
|
|
| HIV/AIDS | $9–126 [ |
| Voluntary counseling and testing | |
| Peer-based programs targeting at-risk groups | |
| School-based interventions that disseminate information to students | |
| Prevention of mother-to-child-transmission with antiretroviral therapy | |
| Surgical services and emergency care | $6–212 [ |
| Surgical ward in a district hospital | |
| Staffed community ambulance | |
| Training of lay first responders and volunteer paramedics | |
| Tuberculosis | $8–263 [ |
| Childhood vaccination against endemic TB | |
| Directly observed short-course chemotherapy | |
| Isoniazid treatment of epidemic TB | |
| Management of drug resistance | |
| Using MgSO4 prophylaxis for only severe cases of pre-eclampsia in low GNI countries | $263.00 [ |
| Maternal and neonatal care | $127–394 [ |
| Increased primary care coverage | |
| Improved quality of comprehensive emergency obstetric care | |
| Improved overall quality and coverage of care | |
| Neonatal packages targeted to families, communities, and clinics | |
| Incremental cost of preventing one case of eclampsia using MgSO4 in low GNI countries | $456.00 [ |
The italicized text denotes the study program in Nepal and aims to contextualize our findings against those of alternative resource uses recommended by the Disease Control Priorities (2nd ed)