| Literature DB >> 29664913 |
Jia Hui Chai1, Chun Kiat Lee2, Hong Kai Lee2, Nicholas Wong3, Kahwee Teo4, Chuen Seng Tan1, Praveen Thokala5, Julian Wei-Tze Tang3,6, Paul Anantharajah Tambyah7, Vernon Min Sen Oh7, Tze Ping Loh2, Joanne Yoong1.
Abstract
Pyrexia of unknown origin (PUO) is defined as a temperature of >38.3°C that lasts for >3 weeks, where no cause can be found despite appropriate investigation. Existing protocols for the work-up of PUO can be extensive and costly, motivating the application of recent advances in molecular diagnostics to pathogen testing. There have been many reports describing various analytical methods and performance of metagenomic pathogen testing in clinical samples but the economics of it has been less well studied. This study pragmatically evaluates the feasibility of introducing metagenomic testing in this setting by assessing the relative cost of clinically-relevant strategies employing this investigative tool under various cost and performance scenarios using Singapore as a demonstration case, and assessing the price and performance benchmarks, which would need to be achieved for metagenomic testing to be potentially considered financially viable relative to the current diagnostic standard. This study has some important limitations: we examined only impact of introducing the metagenomic test to the overall diagnostic cost and excluded costs associated with hospitalization and makes assumptions about the performance of the routine diagnostic tests, limiting the cost of metagenomic test, and the lack of further work-up after positive pathogen detection by the metagenomic test. However, these assumptions were necessary to keep the model within reasonable limits. In spite of these, the simplified presentation lends itself to the illustration of the key insights of our paper. In general, we find the use of metagenomic testing as second-line investigation is effectively dominated, and that use of metagenomic testing at first-line would typically require higher rates of detection or lower cost than currently available in order to be justifiable purely as a cost-saving measure. We conclude that current conditions do not warrant a widespread rush to deploy metagenomic testing to resolve any and all uncertainty, but rather as a front-line technology that should be used in specific contexts, as a supplement to rather than a replacement for careful clinical judgement.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29664913 PMCID: PMC5903630 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0194648
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Decision tree representing the conventional diagnostic workflow for PUO in adults based on a clinical guideline [1], and the subsequent introduction of metagenomic pathogen testing as first- or second-line investigations.
Investigations recommended for work-up of PUO in the clinical guideline [1] with modifications.
The total cost for each line of investigations are shown in Singapore dollars (SGD).
| Investigations | Total cost |
|---|---|
| SGD 826.30 | |
| Complete blood count with differential | |
| Electrolyte panel | |
| Liver function tests | |
| Gamma-glutamyl transferase | |
| Blood cultures x 3 | |
| Urine dipstick | |
| Urine microscopy | |
| Urine cultures | |
| Erythrocyte sedimentation rate | |
| Quantiferon test for tuberculosis | |
| Chest radiography | |
| SGD 850.00 | |
| Computed tomography scan of abdomen and pelvis | |
| SGD 433.00 | |
| Urine culture | |
| Sputum culture and gram stain | |
| Sputum culture for tuberculosis | |
| VDRL | |
| Epstein-Barr virus IgG | |
| Epstein-Barr virus IgM | |
| Cytomegalovirus IgG | |
| Cytomegalovirus IgM | |
| Human immunodeficiency virus serology | |
| Antistreptolysin-O antibodies titer | |
| SGD 56.10 | |
| Peripheral blood smear | |
| Serum protein electrophoresis | |
| SGD 2840.00 | |
| Bone scan | |
| Mammography | |
| Chest CT with contrast | |
| Positron emission tomography scan | |
| SGD 40.00 | |
| Rheumatoid factor | |
| Antinuclear antibodies | |
| SGD 158.20 | |
| Thyroid studies | |
| Angiotensin-converting enzyme levels (ACE) | |
| SGD 3527.30 | |
| Sum of costs for all third-line, disease-specific investigations above |
Probability of disease-specific diagnostic outcome (without next-generation sequencing).
| Disease-specific diagnosis | % | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Infectious disease | 36 | Hayakawa et al 2012 [ |
| Malignancies | 13 | Hayakawa et al 2012 [ |
| Autoimmune disease | 21 | Hayakawa et al 2012 [ |
| Miscellaneous | 6 | Hayakawa et al 2012 [ |
| Unresolved diagnosis | 24 | Hayakawa et al 2012 [ |
| Infectious disease | 14 | Vanderschueren et al 2003 [ |
| Malignancies | 11 | Vanderschueren et al 2003 [ |
| Autoimmune disease | 21 | Vanderschueren et al 2003 [ |
| Miscellaneous | 10 | Vanderschueren et al 2003 [ |
| Unresolved diagnosis | 44 | Vanderschueren et al 2003 [ |
List of parameters in break-even analysis.
| Parameters | Baseline | Low | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Positive findings of first-line investigation | 10% | 5% | 20% |
| Positive findings of second-line investigation | 20% | 10% | 40% |
| Cost of next-generation sequencing | $1000 | $100 | $2000 |
| Expected total cost of current standard of care | $2516 | $2060 | $3427 |
Fig 2Expected cost of next-generation sequencing (NGS) strategies vs. current standard of care (baseline scenario).
Results of break-even analysis.
| Scenarios | Break-even points (Detection rate of NGS) | |
|---|---|---|
| NGS adjuncts first-line | NGS adjuncts second-line | |
| Baseline | 60% | 98% |
| Low infectious disease prevalence | 48% | 68% |
| Cost | 81% | Does not break even |
| Cost | 39% | 50% |
| Variations of first-line and second-line investigations | 51%–78% | 82%—does not break even |
*Cost of diagnostic tests in infectious disease, solid tumor and unresolved diagnosis