| Literature DB >> 29288334 |
Filipa Sampaio1, Jan J Barendregt2,3, Inna Feldman4, Yong Yi Lee3,5, Michael G Sawyer6,7, Mark R Dadds8, James G Scott5,9,10, Cathrine Mihalopoulos11.
Abstract
Parenting programmes are the recommended treatments of conduct disorders (CD) in children, but little is known about their longer term cost-effectiveness. This study aimed to evaluate the population cost-effectiveness of one of the most researched evidence-based parenting programmes, the Triple P-Positive Parenting Programme, delivered in a group and individual format, for the treatment of CD in children. A population-based multiple cohort decision analytic model was developed to estimate the cost per disability-adjusted life year (DALY) averted of Triple P compared with a 'no intervention' scenario, using a health sector perspective. The model targeted a cohort of 5-9-year-old children with CD in Australia currently seeking treatment, and followed them until they reached adulthood (i.e., 18 years). Multivariate probabilistic and univariate sensitivity analyses were conducted to incorporate uncertainty in the model parameters. Triple P was cost-effective compared to no intervention at a threshold of AU$50,000 per DALY averted when delivered in a group format [incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) = $1013 per DALY averted; 95% uncertainty interval (UI) 471-1956] and in an individual format (ICER = $20,498 per DALY averted; 95% UI 11,146-39,470). Evidence-based parenting programmes, such as the Triple P, for the treatment of CD among children appear to represent good value for money, when delivered in a group or an individual face-to-face format, with the group format being the most cost-effective option. The current model can be used for economic evaluations of other interventions targeting CD and in other settings.Entities:
Keywords: Children and adolescents; Conduct disorder; Cost-effectiveness; Parenting programme; Population model
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29288334 PMCID: PMC6013530 DOI: 10.1007/s00787-017-1100-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Child Adolesc Psychiatry ISSN: 1018-8827 Impact factor: 4.785
Input parameters and uncertainty ranges used to model health benefits
| Parameters | Value and uncertainty range | Distribution used in PSA | Sources |
|---|---|---|---|
| Patient flowchart | |||
| Proportion of parents offered the intervention | 60% (range 40–80) | Pert | Consultation with TAP |
| Proportion of parents taking up the intervention | 60% (range 40–80) | Pert | NSMHWB [ |
| Proportion dropouts (completing 20% of intervention (2 sessions) | 42% (range 36–49) | Pert | 1-proportion of completers [ |
| Proportion of parents completing the intervention | 58% (range 52–65) | Pert | Own meta-analysis of studies [ |
| Epidemiological inputs | |||
| Population | 5–9-year-old children with CD | 2013 Australian population [ | |
| All-cause mortality | Single age rates | 2013 Australian life tables [ | |
| Prevalence of conduct disorder | Average 5–18 age range 0.026 (see Supplementary Appendix for age- and sex-specific estimates) | Beta | [ |
| Remission | Average 5–18 age range 0.304 (see Supplementary Appendix for age- and sex-specific estimates) | Gamma | [ |
| Incidence | Average 5–18 age range 0,009 (see Supplementary Appendix for age- and sex-specific estimates) | Gamma | [ |
| Case fatality | 0b | [ | |
| Disability weight for conduct disorder | 0.241 (95% CI 0.159–0.341)c | Beta | [ |
| Effect size group Triple P | 0.054 (95% CI 0.003–0.875)d | Lognormal | [ |
| Effect size individual Triple P | 0.655 (95% CI 0.484–0.887)d | Lognormal | [ |
PSA probabilistic sensitivity analysis, TAP technical advisory panel, NSMHWB 2014 National Survey of Mental Health and Well-Being—child component, CI confidence interval
aSee Section 3 of the Supplementary Appendix for detailed methods on the calculation of the proportion of intervention completers and dropouts
bAs per the 2013 GBD study, case fatality was zero. This is because no estimate of excess mortality due to CD was found in the literature
cUnadjusted disability weight used as the cohort of children modelled in this study was symptomatic and determined appropriate for intervention; therefore, the “weighted” disability weight reported in [22] is an underestimate, given it includes children with a less severe condition
dA follow-up study of Sanders et al. [27] reports the outcomes of individual Triple P at 1- and 3-year follow-up (the control group is dropped after post-test) and treatment gains are maintained at both follow-up periods. The initial effect size of the intervention targeting 3 year olds was assumed to remain until 6 years of age
Input parameters and uncertainty ranges used in the model for costing analysis
| Cost parameters (AUS$) | Value and uncertainty range | Distribution used in PSAc | Sources |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cost of general practitioner (first visit) | Government: $97.27 | MBS items 2700, 2701, 2715 and 2717 [ | |
| Cost of general practitioner (follow-up visit) | Government: $70.30 | MBS item 2712 [ | |
| Cost of MBS-funded psychologist single | Government: $102.34; private: $18.06 | MBS items 80,010 and 80,110 [ | |
| Cost of MBS-funded psychologist group | Government: $25.61; private: $4.52 | MBS items 80,020 and 80,120 [ | |
| Cost workbooks Triple P | Triple P practitioner resourcesa | ||
| Every parent | Private: $35 | ||
| Every parent group workbook | Private: $14.95 | ||
| Cost uncertainty parameter out-of-pocket costs | Range ± 20% of unit costs | Pert | Protocol |
| Annual cost of a prevalent case of conduct disorder (for the calculation of cost offsets) | |||
| Health care | 5–10 years: $1076.03 (both males and females) (range ± 20%) | Pert | Own calculations (see Section 5.2 of the Supplementary Appendix) |
| 11–18 years: males: $333.01; females: $141.03 (range ± 20%) | Pert | Own calculations (see Section 5.2 of the Supplementary Appendix) | |
| Other sector costsb | 5–10 years: $2270.85 (both males and females) (range ± 20%) | Pert | Own calculations (see Section 5.2 of the Supplementary Appendix) |
| 11–18 years: males: $10,854.29; females: $1027.68 (range ± 20%) | Pert | Own calculations (see Section 5.2 of the Supplementary Appendix) | |
| Time cost (per hour)b | $9.96 | (Uprated to 2013 AU$) [ | |
| Travel cost (per trip)b | $24.67 | (Uprated to 2013 AU$) [ | |
| Discount rate | 3% | [ | |
MBS Medicare Benefits Schedule
a http://www29.triplep.net/files/pdf/TripleP_Australian_Order_Form_for_PRACTITIONERS.pdf
bTime and travel costs and other sector costs were not included in the base-case analysis, only used in the sensitivity analysis
cA Pert ± 20% distribution was used for every cost parameter which had uncertainty modelled
Results of the base-case model examining the cost-effectiveness of group and individual Level 4 Triple P
| Intervention delivery format | Mean ICER (95% UI) (AU$/DALY averted) | DALYs averted (95% UI) | Intervention costs (AU$) (95% UI) | Cost offsets (AU$) (95% UI) | Net costs (AU$) (95% UI) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Government | Private | Total | |||||
| Group | 1013 (471–1956) | 2421 (1234–4116) | 4.6 M (3.3–6.1 M) | 912,862 (610,381–1.3 M) | 5.5 M (3.9–7.4 M) | 3.4 M (2 M–5 M) | 2.1 M (1.3–3.4 M) |
| Individual | 20,498 (11,146–39,470) | 371 (161–670) | 6.3 M (4.4–8.4 M) | 859,465 (567,906–1.2 M) | 7.2 M (5–9.6 M) | 333,236 (163,830–554,751) | 6.8 M (4.8–9.2 M) |
M millions
Fig. 1Cost-effectiveness plane of the base-case analysis
Fig. 2Cost-effectiveness acceptability curve of the base-case analysis
Results of univariate sensitivity analysis for the base-case model examining the cost-effectiveness of group and individual level 4 Triple P
| Sensitivity analysis | Group ICER (95% UI) (AU$/DALY averted) | Individual ICER (95% UI) (AU$/DALY averted) |
|---|---|---|
| Base-case analysis | 1013 (471–1956) | 20,498 (11,146–39,470) |
| (1) No cost offsets (health care) | 2460 (1542–3871) | 21,430 (11,828–40,682) |
| (2) With cost offsets (health care + other sector costs) | Dominantc | 18,527 (9564–37,207) |
| (3) With time and travel costs | 3567 (2233–5624) | 29,903 (16,532–56,903) |
| (4a) 50% decay in effect size over 5 years | Dominantc (dominant to 2117)a | 13,911 (dominatedd to 77,650)b |
| (4b) Full effect size extrapolated over 5 years | Dominantc | 2336 (1306–4009) |
| (5) Dropouts get 50% of health benefit | 927 (477–1889) | 20,248 (10,756–38,509) |
| (6a) Discount rate of 0% | 955 (439–1779) | 19,820 (10,610–38,218) |
| (6b) Discount rate of 6% | 980 (494–2211) | 20,894 (11,295–41,068) |
aA proportion of the uncertainty iterations lie in the south-east, north-east, and the north-west quadrants of the cost-effectiveness plane, signifying that there is a likelihood that the intervention is more effective and more costly than the comparator, that it is less costly and more effective than the comparator (dominant), and that it is more costly and less effective than the comparator (dominated)
bA proportion of the uncertainty iterations lie in both the north-west and the north-east quadrants of the cost-effectiveness plane, signifying that there is a likelihood that the intervention is less effective and more costly than the comparator (dominated) and that it is more costly and more effective than the comparator
cThe intervention is less costly and more effective than the comparator (dominant)
dThe intervention is less effective and more costly than the comparator (dominated)
Fig. 3Threshold analysis to examine the impact of varying the effect size