| Literature DB >> 28103243 |
William K Redekop1, Edeltraud J Lenk1, Marianne Luyendijk1, Christopher Fitzpatrick2, Louis Niessen3, Wilma A Stolk4, Fabrizio Tediosi5, Adriana J Rijnsburger6, Roel Bakker4, Jan A C Hontelez4, Jan H Richardus4, Julie Jacobson7, Sake J de Vlas4, Johan L Severens1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Lymphatic filariasis (LF), onchocerciasis, schistosomiasis, soil-transmitted helminths (STH) and trachoma represent the five most prevalent neglected tropical diseases (NTDs). They can be controlled or eliminated by means of safe and cost-effective interventions delivered through programs of Mass Drug Administration (MDA)-also named Preventive Chemotherapy (PCT). The WHO defined targets for NTD control/elimination by 2020, reinforced by the 2012 London Declaration, which, if achieved, would result in dramatic health gains. We estimated the potential economic benefit of achieving these targets, focusing specifically on productivity and out-of-pocket payments.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28103243 PMCID: PMC5313231 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0005289
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Fig 1General formula for calculating productivity loss.
TPC = Total productivity costs (in US$ 2005)
NTD = Neglected Tropical Disease
c = Country
y = Year
PS1 = Number of prevalent cases aged 15+ years with sequela 1
PS2 = Number of prevalent cases aged 15+ years with sequela 2
PLs1 = % productivity loss related to sequela 1 of NTD
PLs2 = % productivity loss related to sequela 2 of NTD
I = GDP per capita in the lowest quintile
D = Annual discount rate (%)
t = Time (years beyond 2010).
Estimates of productivity loss used in the calculations of economic benefit.
| Disease & Sequela | Severity | Base case—Annual productivity loss | Sources | Case | Sources | Remarks | Weighted productivity loss per sequela |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lymphedema | 16% | [ | N.A. | N.A. | |||
| Hydrocele | 15% | [ | N.A. | N.A. | |||
| Vision loss | Blindness | 79% | [ | 29% | 49.8% | ||
| Severe | 38% | Idem[ | 12% | 49.8% | |||
| Moderate | 38% | Idem[ | 59% | 49.8% | |||
| Skin disease | Moderate | 10% | [ | 32% | 3.2% | ||
| Mild | 0% | Assumption | 68% | 3.2% | |||
| Acute episode | 0% | [ | N.A. | N.A. | |||
| Mild diarrhea | 3% | [ | N.A. | N.A. | |||
| Hepatomegaly | 3% | Idem[ | N.A. | N.A. | |||
| Dysuria | 1.6% | [ | N.A. | N.A. | |||
| Bladder pathology | 1.6% | Idem[ | N.A. | N.A. | |||
| Hydronephrosis | 1.6% | Idem[ | N.A. | N.A. | |||
| Hematemesis | 100% | [ | N.A. | N.A. | |||
| Ascites | 100% | Idem[ | N.A. | N.A. | |||
| Anemia | 7% | [ | N.A. | N.A. | |||
| Ascariasis | Infestation | 6% | [ | N.A. | N.A. | ||
| Trichuriasis | Infestation | 6% | Idem | N.A. | N.A. | ||
| Hookworm | Infestation | 6% | Idem | N.A. | N.A. | ||
| Hookworm | Anemia | 6% | [ | N.A. | N.A. | ||
| Ascariasis | Mild abdominopelvic problems | 0% | [ | N.A. | N.A. | ||
| Trichuriasis | Mild abdominopelvic problems | 0% | Idem | N.A. | N.A. | ||
| Hookworm | Mild abdominopelvic problems | 0% | Idem | N.A. | N.A. | ||
| Ascariasis | Severe wasting | 0% | [ | N.A. | N.A. | ||
| Trichuriasis | Severe wasting | 0% | Idem | N.A. | N.A. | ||
| Hookworm | Severe wasting | 0% | Idem | N.A. | N.A. | ||
| Vision Loss | Blindness | 79% | [ | 35% | 32% | ||
| Severe Visual Impairment | 38% | [ | 10% | 32% | |||
| Moderate Visual Impairment | 0% | Assumption | 55% | 32% | |||
1. Case mix represents the distribution of the different degrees of severity within a disease sequela. Since the prevalent case estimates were only available per disease sequela and not severity, productivity loss values of the different degrees of severity were combined with the case mix to calculate a frequency-weighted value of productivity loss for that sequela. For sequelae with only one level of severity, the productivity loss value was applied to all prevalent cases.
2. The lay description used in the GBD study to describe some sequelae indicated that the sequela “did not interfere / did not impose difficulties with daily activities”, therefore productivity loss assumed 0%.
3. Even though productivity loss due to schistosomiasis and STH-related anemia was based on the same studies, the actual degree of productivity loss differed between the diseases. The GBD documentation describes a higher mean hemoglobin loss due to schistosomiasis (2.8 g/L) than the loss due to hookworm (2.08 g/L). Since the literature showed a linear relationship between hemoglobin loss and productivity loss, this proportion was kept in the calculations of the productivity loss due to schistosomiasis and hookworm anemia (higher percentage of productivity loss due to schistosomiasis anemia than to hookworm anemia).[59,62].
4. Case-mix values from the GBD study documentation and from the assumptions used by de Vlas et al.[20].
5. Evans et al. made no distinction between moderate and severe visual impairment. We assumed that Evans considered the productivity loss from low vision a weighted average of moderate and severe impairment and that the distribution of moderately and severely impaired persons was equal to the distribution used in the GBD study.
6. To ensure a conservative estimate.
7. According to the GBD study, the sequela “did not interfere/did not impose difficulties with daily activities”. Since clinical experience and literature have shown that they interfere with daily activities, productivity loss was not assumed to be 0%.
8. GBD data reported only cases amongst children younger than 5 years, which fell outside the scope of our definition of economically active population of 15+ years.
9. Productivity loss estimates were based on the study of onchocerciasis by Evans et al. since no studies of trachoma-related productivity loss were found and since the GBD descriptions of visual impairment from onchocerciasis and trachoma are similar. Average productivity loss from trachoma differed from that of onchocerciasis because of differences in case mix regarding severity. 0% productivity loss was attributed to moderate visual impairment caused by trachoma to ensure a conservative estimate.
Fig 2General formula for calculating out-of-pocket payments.
TDC = Total Direct Costs (in US$ 2005)
NTD = Neglected Tropical Disease
c = Country
y = Year PS1 = Number of prevalent cases with sequela 1
PS2 = Number of prevalent cases with sequela 2
DCS1 = Annual direct costs sequela 1
DCS2 = Annual direct costs sequela 2
H = percentage of individuals seeking health care
D = Annual discount rate (%)
t = Time (years beyond 2010).
Direct costs used for lymphatic filariasis with lower and upper limits [between brackets].
| LF Sequela | WHO region | Annual Direct Costs | Patients Seeking Treatment | Patients that have ADLA | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ADLA | WHO AFRO | 0.36 [0.6–1.25] | 65% [55% - 70%] | 95% [90–95%] | [ |
| WHO SEARO | 5.60 [0.93–19.43] | ||||
| WHO WPRO | 19.60 [3.27–68.1] | ||||
| WHO AMRO | 6.00 | ||||
| WHO EMRO | 0.36 [0.06–1.25] | ||||
| All GPELF countries | 6.00 [1.0–20.82] | ||||
| India | (same as SEARO) | 85% [65% - 98%] | 95% [90–95%] | [ | |
| ADLA Hydrocele | WHO AFRO | 0.18 [0.3–0.62] | 65% [55% - 70%] | 70% [45% - 90%] | [ |
| WHO SEARO | 2.80 [0.47–9.72] | ||||
| WHO WPRO | 9.80 [1.63–34.01] | ||||
| WHO AMRO | 0.18 [0.03–0.62] | ||||
| WHO EMRO | 0.18 [0.03–0.62] | ||||
| All GPELF countries | 3.00 [0.50–10.41] | ||||
| India | (same as SEARO) | 85% [65% - 98%] | 70% [45% - 90%] | [ | |
| Chronic Lymphedema | All regions | 4.3 [0.85–15.0] | 50% [30–55%] | - | [ |
| India | 65% [49–74%] | - | [ | ||
| Chronic Hydrocele | All regions | 2.9 [0.55–10.05] | 40% [20–50%] | - | [ |
| India | 60% [49–74%] | - |
1. ADLA—acute dermatolymphangioadenitis.
2. Based on an average of two ADLA episodes a year for hydrocele and four ADLA episodes a year for lymphedema [40].
3. WHO AFRO—World Health Organization African Region.
4. WHO SEARO—World Health Organization Region South-East Asia.
5. WHO WPRO—World Health Organization Western Pacific Region.
6. WHO AMRO—World Health Organization Americas Region.
7. WHO EMRO—World Health Organization Eastern Mediterranean Region.
8. GPELF–Global Programme to Eliminate Lymphatic Filariasis.
9. Since the region-specific estimate was not mentioned, the global average was used [40].
10. Hydrocelectomy already included in the chronic cost of hydrocele.
11. Different estimates were used for India due to more primary data available suggesting estimates differ from other regions. [40].
Lower and upper limits used in the sensitivity analyses.
| Relative uncertainty in global prevalence in 2010 | Estimates of productivity loss | Estimates of income | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lower limit | Point estimate | Upper limit | Lower limit | Point estimate | Upper limit | Lower limit | Point estimate | Upper limit | |
| Lymphatic filariasis | 0.886 | 1.000 | 1.136 | 10% | 15% | 20% | 0.871 | 1.000 | 1.424 |
| Onchocerciasis | 0.936 | 1.000 | 1.103 | 14% | 17% | 30% | 0.836 | 1.000 | 1.673 |
| Schistosomiasis | 0.987 | 1.000 | 1.027 | 2.5% | 4% | 18% | 0.815 | 1.000 | 2.352 |
| STH (anemia) | 0.861 | 1.000 | 1.228 | 3% | 6% | 12% | 0.766 | 1.000 | 2.106 |
| STH (infestation) | 3% | 6% | 9% | ||||||
| Trachoma | 0.694 | 1.000 | 1.421 | 16% | 32% | 63% | 0.871 | 1.000 | 1.424 |
1. The productivity loss estimates seen in Table 1 are here shown as frequency-weighted estimates per sequela and per disease with their respective upper and lower limits used in the sensitivity analysis.
Fig 3Productivity loss due to skin disease from onchocerciasis according to the counterfactual and target achievement scenarios (millions I$—international dollars)
Total global loss per year in the counterfactual scenario (blue) and target achievement scenario (orange). The economic benefit is the difference between both scenarios.
Total economic benefit from productivity loss averted, base case estimates and 2.5th and 97.5th percentiles (billions I$—international dollars and US$—US dollars, discounting 3% from 2010).
| Disease | Sequelae | Base Case Estimates I$—International dollars | Base Case Estimates US$—US dollars | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2011–2020 | 2021–2030 | 2011–2020 | 2021–2030 | ||
| Lymphedema | $ 12.7 | $ 16.7 | $ 4.4 | $ 5.9 | |
| Hydrocele | $ 18.1 | $ 22.8 | $ 6.1 | $ 7.9 | |
| Total | $ 30.8 [22.6–41.1] | $ 39.5 [28.9–52.8]1 | $ 10.5 [7.7–14.0] | 13.8 [10.1–18.4] | |
| Skin disease | $ 0.68 | $ 0.86 | $ 0.32 | $ 0.41 | |
| Vision loss | $ 1.9 | $ 3.6 | $ 0.87 | $ 1.7 | |
| Total | $ 2.6 [1.9–4.0] | $ 4.4 [3.2–6.9] | $ 1.19 [0.88–1.84] | $ 2.11 [1.52–3.27] | |
| Anemia | $ 8.7 | $ 17.7 | $ 3.7 | $ 7.5 | |
| Ascites | $ 0.38 | $ 1.4 | $ 0.2 | $ 0.7 | |
| Bladder pathology | $ 0.17 | $ 0.63 | $ 0.1 | $ 0.3 | |
| Dysuria | $ 0.62 | $ 1.5 | $ 0.3 | $ 0.7 | |
| Hematemesis | $ 0.18 | $ 0.66 | $ 0.1 | $ 0.3 | |
| Hepatomegaly | $ 0.96 | $ 2.3 | $ 0.4 | $ 1.1 | |
| Hydronephrosis | $ 0.56 | $ 1.37 | $ 0.3 | $ 0.6 | |
| Mild diarrhea | $ 0.6 | $ 1.5 | $ 0.3 | $ 0.7 | |
| Schistosomiasis deaths | $ 0.85 | $ 1.7 | $ 0.37 | $ 0.74 | |
| Total | $ 12.4 [6.2–35.0] | $ 27.4 [13.6–77.2] | $ 5.5 [2.7–15.4] | $ 11.9 [5.9–33.7] | |
| Ascariasis deaths | $ 0.03 | $ 0.1 | $ 0.01 | $ 0.04 | |
| Ascariasis infestation | $ 47.1 | $ 43.5 | $ 19.8 | $ 18.2 | |
| Hookworm anemia | $ 116.8 | $ 142.8 | $ 48.3 | $ 58.7 | |
| Hookworm infestation | $ 25.1 | $ 28.0 | $ 10.4 | $ 11.5 | |
| Trichuriasis infestation | $ 13.6 | $ 16.5 | $ 5.9 | $ 7.3 | |
| Total | $ 202.8 [141.0–303.4] | $ 231.0 [160.5–345.6] | $ 84.4 [58.7–126.4] | 95.7 [66.6–143.4] | |
| Vision loss | $ 1.9 | $ 10.4 | $ 0.71 | $ 3.6 | |
| Total | $ 1.9 [1.0–3.3] | $ 10.4 [5.5–17.8] | $ 0.71 [0.37–1.23] | $ 3.6 [1.25–6.16] | |
1. Sensitivity analyses’ 2.5th and 97.5th percentiles between brackets.
2. Reported in millions International (I$) and US Dollars (US$) due to the comparatively small numbers.
Fig 4Global economic benefit (productivity loss prevented) for the period 2011–2030 (billions I$—international dollars)
Global economic benefit from reaching the targets for 5 PCT diseases, lower and upper estimates from sensitivity analysis.
Fig 5Global economic benefit or reaching the targets for STH (point estimates), per disease sequela for the period 2011–2030 (billions I$—international dollars)
STH is the disease responsible for the largest economic impact, especially the anemia sequela. The 2.5 and 97.5 percentiles calculated in the sensitivity analysis are shown in the diagram.
Fig 6Economic benefit of reaching the PCT targets per WHO region, with and without China
Regional variation in the economic benefit, per WHO region, where the Western Pacific region outweighs the benefits of all the other regions when China is included, mainly due to the control of STH. The South East Asia region has the highest benefits when China is not included, due to the impact in India.