| Literature DB >> 28255077 |
Kathryn Roberts1, Jeffrey Cannon2, David Atkinson3, Alex Brown4, Graeme Maguire5, Bo Remenyi1, Gavin Wheaton6, Elizabeth Geelhoed7, Jonathan R Carapetis7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Rheumatic heart disease (RHD) remains a leading cause of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in children and young adults in disadvantaged populations. The emergence of echocardiographic screening provides the opportunity for early disease detection and intervention. Using our own multistate model of RHD progression derived from Australian RHD register data, we performed a cost-utility analysis of echocardiographic screening in indigenous Australian children, with the dual aims of informing policy decisions in Australia and providing a model that could be adapted in other countries. METHODS ANDEntities:
Keywords: cost‐effectiveness; echocardiography; pediatrics; rheumatic heart disease; screening
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28255077 PMCID: PMC5524001 DOI: 10.1161/JAHA.116.004515
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Heart Assoc ISSN: 2047-9980 Impact factor: 5.501
Definitions Used in This Paper
| Activity/Hypothesis | Label | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Screening strategy | Echo A | Screen all indigenous children aged 8 and 12 years living in 80 rural/remote communities of the NT annually |
| Echo B | Screen all indigenous children aged 5–12 years in approximately half (40) of the rural/remote NT communities in alternate years | |
| Screening effectiveness hypothesis | Scenario 1 | Assumes that screening diagnoses RHD 1 year earlier than current practice |
| Scenario 2 | Assumes that screening diagnoses RHD 2 years earlier than current practice | |
| Scenario 3 | Assumes that screening diagnoses RHD 3 years earlier than current practice |
NT indicates Northern Territory; RHD, rheumatic heart disease.
Costs and Parameter Estimates for Sensitivity Analysis
| Parameter | Baseline | Minimum–Maximum | Distribution | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cost, RHD management | ||||
| Per‐episode costs | ||||
| ARF/RHD outpatient diagnosis | $1428 | $428–$4564 | Triangular | Table |
| ARF/RHD hospital admission | $11 471 | $8661–$30 200 | Dirichlet | Table |
| RHD surgery | $88 126 | $46 503–$138 749 | Triangular | Table |
| Annual costs (outpatient management) | Table | |||
| Inactive | $198 | $164–$231 | Triangular | |
| Mild RHD | $2567 | $1676–$4233 | Triangular | |
| Moderate RHD | $3267 | $1843–$6534 | Triangular | |
| Severe RHD | $4732 | $3368–$11 976 | Triangular | |
| Severe‐surgery RHD | $4732 | $3368–$13 809 | Triangular | |
| Cost—RHD screening | Table | |||
| Annual costs | ||||
| Equipment | $37 045 | Not varied | ··· | |
| Admin and consumables | $5500 | $4500–$6500 | Triangular | |
| Staff salaries | $259 000 | $216 100–$297 000 | Triangular | |
| Travel (Echo A) | $221 270 | $156 524–$270 782 | Triangular | |
| Travel (Echo B) | $136 399 | $89 274–$206 115 | Triangular | |
| Per‐episode costs | ||||
| Cardiology follow‐up (per child) | $1260 | $260–$2324 | Triangular | |
| Other parameter estimates | ||||
| Discount factor | 5% | 3–7% | Uniform | PBAC |
| Incidence of RHD (cases per year) | 27.6 | 22.1–33.2 | Uniform | Figure |
| Health state transition probabilities | Bootstrap | Cannon et al | ||
| Disability weights | Table | |||
| Mild | 0.031 | 0.017–0.050 | Triangular | |
| Moderate | 0.037 | 0.021–0.058 | Triangular | |
| Severe (no surgery) | 0.186 | 0.128–0.261 | Triangular | |
| Severe after surgery | 0.070 | 0.044–0.102 | Triangular | |
| Screening parameters | ||||
| Screened, % | 75% | 50–100% | Uniform | Assumed |
| Sensitivity of echo | 100% | 95–100% | Uniform | Assumed |
| Diagnosed mild, % | 80% | 65–95% | Dirichlet | Assumed |
| Diagnosed moderate, % | 15% | 5–25% | Dirichlet | Assumed |
| Diagnosed severe, % | 5% | 0–10% | Dirichlet | Assumed |
| Cardiology follow‐up, % | 2.5% | 2–5% | Uniform | Assumed |
All costs are presented in Australian dollars at 2013 price levels. ARF indicates acute rheumatic fever; PBAC, Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Council; RHD, rheumatic heart disease.
A Dirichlet distribution was used to sample the proportion of mild (n=10), moderate (n=7), and severe (n=1) cases, based on severity of new cases in our screening study.10
Annuity in advance over 5 years calculated as the upfront cost ($182 720) minus discounted resale price of 10% purchase price.
A Dirichlet distribution was used to sample the proportion of cases admitted with Australian refined diagnosis‐related groups F69A (n=12), F69B (n=47), F75A (n=4), F75B (n=33), F75C (n=113), I66A (n=10), and I66B (n=140), derived from Royal Darwin Hospital admission data 2008–2013.
Figure 2Tornado plot showing the effect of varying individual parameter estimates on the ICER of echocardiographic screening for RHD (Echo B, scenario 2). The solid line in each bar represents the baseline assumption. The dashed line represents an ICER threshold of AU$50 000 per DALY averted. The dotted line represents an ICER threshold of AU$70 000 (which approximates Australia's per capita gross domestic product26) per DALY averted. *At a maximum admission cost of AU$30 200, screening was cost‐saving (ICER less than AU$0 per DALY averted). ARF indicates acute rheumatic fever; DALY, disability‐adjusted life‐year; ICER, incremental cost‐effectiveness ratio; RHD, rheumatic heart disease.
Figure 1Transition probabilities between health states in the first year of rheumatic heart disease (RHD) diagnosis. The 3 shaded circles represent the proportion of children (aged 5–15 years) in each health state when they are first diagnosed with RHD according to current practice. Proportions of children who did not change health states are not shown.
RHD Health States and Matched Disability Weights From the 2010 Global Burden of Disease21
| RHD Health State | Global Burden of Disease Category | Disability Weight (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|
| Mild | Generic uncomplicated disease: worry and daily medication | 0.031 (0.017–0.050) |
| Moderate | Heart failure: mild | 0.037 (0.021–0.058) |
| Severe, after surgery | Heart failure: moderate | 0.070 (0.044–0.102) |
| Severe, before surgery | Heart failure: severe | 0.186 (0.128–0.261) |
RHD indicates rheumatic heart disease.
Economic and Health Utility Outcomes After Completion of the Minimum Recommended Duration of Secondary Prophylaxis
| Percentage of Simulated Patients in Each RHD Health State | Total Treatment Cost All Patients | DALYs Lost Per Person | Mean Treatment Cost Per Person | Mean Duration Prophylaxis Per Person (Years) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RHD severity at diagnosis | |||||
| Mild | 59.5% | 2695 | 0.80 | 36.0 | 14.6 |
| Moderate | 27.1% | 1961 | 1.48 | 52.4 | 18.4 |
| Severe | 13.4% | 2202 | 3.37 | 118.5 | 22.6 |
| Heart failure (any time) | |||||
| No | 62.3% | 1816 | 0.36 | 23.2 | 12.1 |
| Yes | 37.7% | 5042 | 2.94 | 106.2 | 24.3 |
| Surgery | |||||
| No | 68.9% | 2068 | 0.51 | 23.9 | 12.6 |
| Yes | 31.1% | 4789 | 3.15 | 122.4 | 25.9 |
| Any RHD | 100% | 6858 | 1.33 | 54.5 | 16.7 |
Costs and DALYs were discounted at 5% per annum. DALY indicates disability‐adjusted life‐year; RHD, rheumatic heart disease.
Includes all new RHD diagnoses in the 5‐year study period (n=138).
Assumes diagnosis was made in the first year of the 5‐year study period (n=27.6), and assumes 50% adherence to benzathine penicillin G and outpatient management. If 100% adherence is assumed, mean treatment cost per person is $73 454.
Heart failure includes all cases diagnosed with severe RHD at some time during the follow‐up period.
Clinical Outcomes and Cost–Utility Analysis of Two RHD Screening Strategies Over 5 Years, Assuming That RHD Can be Diagnosed 1, 2, or 3 Years Earlier by Screening (Scenarios 1, 2, and 3)
| Baseline | Scenario 1 | Scenario 2 | Scenario 3 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No Screen | Echo A | Echo B | Echo A | Echo B | Echo A | Echo B | |
| Clinical outcomes | |||||||
| RHD severity at diagnosis | |||||||
| Mild, % | 59.5 | 61.5 | 63.9 | 62.6 | 67.2 | 64.6 | 68.2 |
| Moderate, % | 27.1 | 26.3 | 25.8 | 26.3 | 25.0 | 25.6 | 24.6 |
| Severe, % | 13.4 | 12.2 | 10.3 | 11.1 | 7.8 | 9.8 | 7.1 |
| Heart failure at any time, % | 37.7 | 36.7 | 35.2 | 35.9 | 33.5 | 34.8 | 33.2 |
| Surgery, % | 31.1 | 30.2 | 29.0 | 29.6 | 27.6 | 28.7 | 27.3 |
| Death, % | 11.3 | 10.9 | 10.4 | 10.7 | 9.9 | 10.3 | 9.8 |
| Cost–utility analysis | |||||||
| Number of diagnoses | 138 | 143 | 146 | 151 | 164 | 163 | 183 |
| Mean cost per diagnosis (AU$,000) | 49.6 | 65.4 | 61.0 | 62.5 | 55.5 | 59.3 | 53.0 |
| RHD screening cost | ··· | 18.2 | 16.5 | 17.2 | 14.8 | 15.9 | 13.2 |
| RHD management cost | 49.6 | 47.2 | 44.5 | 45.3 | 40.7 | 43.4 | 39.7 |
| Mean utility per diagnosis (DALY) | 1.33 | 1.30 | 1.25 | 1.28 | 1.21 | 1.25 | 1.20 |
| ICER (AU$/DALY saved) | ··· | 489 016 | 147 170 | 253 994 | 47 546 | 116 129 | 25 387 |
DALY indicates disability‐adjusted life‐year; ICER, incremental cost‐effectiveness ratio; RHD, rheumatic heart disease.
Cost‐effective strategy (ICER less than AU$50 000 per DALY saved).
Figure 3Cost‐effectiveness acceptability curve for Echo B, scenario 2. ICER indicates incremental cost‐effectiveness ratio.
Clinical Outcomes and Cost–Utility Analysis of Improving BPG Adherence With and Without Screening
| No Screen | Screen | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Current Progression (50% BPG) | Improved Progression | Current Progression (50% BPG) | Improved Progression | |
| Clinical outcomes | ||||
| RHD severity at diagnosis | ||||
| Mild, % | 59.5 | 59.5 | 67.2 | 67.2 |
| Moderate, % | 27.1 | 27.1 | 25.0 | 25.0 |
| Severe, % | 13.4 | 13.4 | 7.8 | 7.8 |
| Heart failure at any time, % | 37.7 | 18.9 | 33.5 | 12.9 |
| Surgery, % | 31.1 | 15.2 | 27.6 | 10.4 |
| Death, % | 11.3 | 6.5 | 9.9 | 4.6 |
| Cost–utility analysis | ||||
| Number of diagnoses | 138 | 138 | 164 | 164 |
| Mean cost per diagnosis (AU$,000) | 49.6 | 51.3 | 55.5 | 55.6 |
| RHD screening cost | ··· | ··· | 14.8 | 14.8 |
| RHD management cost | 49.6 | 51.3 | 40.7 | 40.8 |
| Mean utility per diagnosis (DALY) | 1.33 | 0.86 | 1.21 | 0.69 |
| ICER (AU$/DALY saved) | ··· | 3463 | 47 546 | 9329 |
BPG indicates benzathine penicillin G; DALY, disability‐adjusted life‐year; ICER, incremental cost‐effectiveness ratio; RHD, rheumatic heart disease.
Echo B, scenario 2.
Improved progression assumes mild disease does not progress; half of the moderate disease that currently progresses to severe will not progress; all other transitions remain the same.
Compared with current progression in the no‐screen cohort.