| Literature DB >> 28882149 |
Dominic Thorrington1, Edwin van Leeuwen2,3, Mary Ramsay4, Richard Pebody2, Marc Baguelin2,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: As part of the national seasonal influenza vaccination programme in England and Wales, children receive a quadrivalent vaccine offering protection against two influenza A strains and two influenza B strains. Healthy children receive a quadrivalent live attenuated influenza vaccine (QLAIV), whilst children with contraindications receive the quadrivalent inactivated influenza vaccine (QIIV). Individuals aged younger than 65 years in the clinical risk populations and elderly individuals aged 65+ years receive either a trivalent inactivated influenza vaccine (TIIV) offering protection from two A strains and one B strain or the QIIV at the choice of their general practitioner. The cost-effectiveness of quadrivalent vaccine programmes is an open question. The original analysis that supported the paediatric programme only considered a trivalent live attenuated vaccine (LAIV). The cost-effectiveness of the QIIV to other patients has not been established. We sought to estimate the cost-effectiveness of these programmes, establishing a maximum incremental total cost per dose of quadrivalent vaccines over trivalent vaccines.Entities:
Keywords: Cost-effectiveness; Influenza; LAIV; QALY; Quadrivalent vaccines; Vaccination
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28882149 PMCID: PMC5590113 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-017-0932-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Fig. 1Scenarios simulated in the model
Parameters used in the dynamic transmission model
| Parameter | Value and uncertainty | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Efficacy against B strain(s) | ||
| TIIV and LAIV, < 65 years | 42% | [ |
| TIIV and LAIV, 65+ years | 28% | [ |
| QIIV and QLAIV, < 65 years § | 70% (min. 50%, max. 90%) | [ |
| QIIV and QLAIV, 65+ years § | 46% (min. 30%, max. 70%) | [ |
| Influenza vaccination coverage | ||
| Low-risk < 5 years § | 33.7% (±10%) | [ |
| Low-risk 5–16 years § | 54.9% (±10%) | [ |
| Clinical risk < 6 months–64 years § | 45.1% (±10%) | [ |
| 65+ years § | 71.0% (±10%) | [ |
| Health care resource costs | ||
| GP consultation | £46, lognormal (mean 46, standard deviation 8.4) | [ |
| Inpatient admission | £1050, lognormal (mean 1050, standard deviation 192.1) | [ |
The § symbol denotes that the parameter was used in the sensitivity analysis
Fig. 2Distribution of the number of infections for each vaccination scenario
Mean incremental benefits of each proposed vaccination programme
| Parameter | Mean reduction after starting programme 1 | Mean reduction after starting programme 2 | Mean reduction after starting programme 3 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Infections | 643,652 (110,710) | 136,284 (21,246) | 39,297 (16,105) |
| Symptomatic/febrile cases | 59,457 (20,816) | 12,578 (4264) | 3641 (1942) |
| GP consultations | 63,276 (10,680) | 11,305 (1757) | 2658 (1123) |
| Hospitalisations | 356 (64) | 49 (9) | 14 (6) |
The maximum incremental vaccine cost to ensure that 90% of all simulations are cost-effective to five different WTP thresholds
| Cost per QALY | Programme 1 | Programme 2 | Programme 3 |
|---|---|---|---|
| £10,000 | £3.69 | £1.03 | £0.11 |
| £15,000 | £5.04 | £1.44 | £0.16 |
| £20,000 | £6.36 | £1.84 | £0.20 |
| £25,000 | £7.58 | £2.25 | £0.26 |
| £30,000 | £8.89 | £2.66 | £0.31 |
Fig. 3Tornado plot showing the estimated change in the maximum incremental cost per dose of the quadrivalent vaccines for programme 1, assuming a WTP threshold of £20,000 per QALY