| Literature DB >> 29880046 |
Qinglu Cheng1, Michelle Gibb2, Nicholas Graves3, Kathleen Finlayson3, Rosana E Pacella3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Venous leg ulcers (VLUs) are expensive to treat and impair quality of life of affected individuals. Although improved healing and reduced recurrence rates have been observed following the introduction of evidence-based guidelines, a significant evidence-practice gap exists. Compression is the recommended first-line therapy for treatment of VLUs but unlike many other developed countries, the Australian health system does not subsidise compression therapy. The objective of this study is to estimate the cost-effectiveness of guideline-based care for VLUs that includes public sector reimbursement for compression therapy for affected individuals in Australia.Entities:
Keywords: Cost-effectiveness; Guideline-based care; Markov model; Venous leg ulcer; Wound management
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29880046 PMCID: PMC5992639 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-018-3234-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Fig. 1Markov model structure for assessing the cost-effectiveness of guideline-based optimal care for VLUs
Markov model inputs
| Variables | Value | References |
|---|---|---|
| Transition probabilitiesa | ||
|
| ||
| Probability of healing (3-month) | 0.2281 | [ |
| Probability of recurrence (annual) | 0.5574 | [ |
| Probability of hospitalisation (5-year) | 0.24 | [ |
|
| ||
| Probability of healing (3-month) | 0.5872 | [ |
| Probability of recurrence (annual) | 0.2222 | [ |
| Probability of hospitalisation (annual) | 0.0116 | [ |
| VLU Incidence rate (annual) | 0.0121 | [ |
| All-cause mortality rate (annual) | 0.0282 | Calculated from ABS data [ |
| Proportion of unhealed ulcers with infection | ||
|
| 10% | [ |
|
| 5% | [ |
| Cost itemsb | ||
| GP | AUD 71.70 | MBS item 36 |
| Nurse practitioner | AUD 58.55 | MBS item 82215 |
| Vascular surgeon | AUD 85.55 | MBS item 104 |
| Community nurse hourly wage rate | AUD 24.74–37.05 | [ |
| Ankle-brachial pressure index (ABPI) assessment | AUD 63.74 | MBS item 11610 |
| Pathology test | AUD 33.75 | MBS item 69306 |
| Compression bandage | AUD 51.5 | Retail price |
| Compression stocking | AUD 97.75 | Retail price |
| Complicated VLU with hospitalisation | AUD 18,331.60 | [ |
| Quality of life utility score | ||
| Healed VLU | 0.75 | [ |
| Unhealed VLU | 0.64 | [ |
| Complicated VLU with hospitalisation | 0.54 | calculated |
aYearly or monthly probabilities were transformed to fortnightly probabilities by the formula: tp = 1 – (1 - tpt)1/t [14]
bCosts for health states by State and Territories in Australia are presented in Additional file 1 Table S4
Summary of resource use in usual care group and optimal care group
| Usual care | Optimal care (Option 1) | Optimal care (Option 2) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Healed VLU | No additional care | • Clinic assessment by nurse practitioner every 3 months | • Clinic assessment by GP every 3 months |
| Unhealed VLU | • One-off assessment by GP | • One-off ABPI or vascular assessment and assessment by nurse practitioner and vascular surgeon | • One-off ABPI and GP assessment |
Baseline outcomes for all affected persons over 5 years in Australia (optimal care versus usual care)c
| Option 1 | Option 2 | |
|---|---|---|
| Total costs in usual care group | $2,831,006,652 | $2,831,006,652 |
| Total costs in optimal care group | $1,200,427,937 | $1,126,566,791 |
| Total incremental costs | -$1,630,578,715 | -$1,704,439,861 |
| Health system costs in usual care group | $2,516,869,902 | $2,516,869,902 |
| Health system costs in optimal care group | $1,128,856,145 | $1,093,241,400 |
| Incremental costs | -$1,388,013,757 | -$1,423,628,502 |
| Costs by Australian government in usual care group | $2,298,900,749 | $2,298,900,749 |
| Costs by Australian government in optimal care group | $1,114,692,967 | $1,079,078,223 |
| Incremental costs | -$1,184,207,781 | -$1,219,822,526 |
| Costs by State and Territory government in usual care group | $217,969,153 | $217,969,153 |
| Costs by State and Territory government in optimal care group | $14,163,177 | $14,163,177 |
| Incremental costs | -$203,805,976 | -$203,805,976 |
| Out-of-pocket costs in usual care group | $314,136,750 | $314,136,750 |
| Out-of-pocket costs in optimal care group | $71,571,792 | $33,325,391 |
| Incremental costs | -$242,564,957 | -$280,811,359 |
| Total costs of compression products in usual care groupa | $487,379,273 | $487,379,273 |
| Total costs of compression products in optimal care groupb | $539,765,074 | $539,765,074 |
| Incremental costs | $52,385,801 | $52,385,801 |
| Costs of compression products in usual care group indirectly covered by health system | $271,197,256 | $271,197,256 |
| Total costs of compression products in optimal care group covered by health system | $539,765,074 | $539,765,074 |
| Incremental costs | $268,567,818 | $268,567,818 |
| Costs of other dressings in usual care group | $37,875,018 | $37,875,018 |
| Costs of other dressings in optimal care group | $68,758,106 | $68,758,106 |
| Incremental costs | $30,883,088 | $30,883,088 |
| Total QALYs in usual care group | 476,090 | 476,090 |
| Total QALYs in optimal care group | 504,431 | 504,431 |
| Incremental QALYs | 28,341 | 28,341 |
aTotal costs of compression products in usual care group were covered by out-of-pocket expenditure and government’s funding to health professionals
bCosts of compression products in optimal care group were covered by Australian government
cCosts were measured in 2015 Australian dollars. Baseline outcomes by State and Territory are summarised in Additional file 1 Tables S6 and S7. Costs per person and QALY per person could not be calculated by dividing the total by the number of affected persons as not all affected persons received treatment and prevention for the entire 5 years in this model. By the end of 2020, patients who developed VLUs in 2016 would incur more costs associated with treatment and prevention than those who developed VLUs in 2017. Expected costs and QALYs per person over 5 years if the person received treatment and prevention for 5 years are summarised in Additional file 1: Tables S8 and S9
Fig. 2Tornado diagrams for NSW, VIC, QLD, SA (optimal care service delivery Option 1)
Fig. 3Tornado diagrams for WA, NT, TAS, ACT (optimal care service delivery Option 1)
Scenario analysis varying hospitalisation rate in usual care group (optimal care service delivery Option 1)a
| Hospitalisation rate in usual care group (annual) | 5.34% (Baseline) | 1.16% (low) | 12.36% (high) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total costs in usual care group | $2,831,006,652 | $2,543,990,422 | $3,340,479,326 |
| Total costs in optimal care group | $1,200,427,937 | $1,200,427,937 | $1,200,427,937 |
| Total incremental costs | -$1,630,578,715 | -$1,343,562,485 | -$2,140,051,390 |
| Total QALYs in usual care group | 476,090 | 476,181 | 475,928 |
| Total QALYs in optimal care group | 504,431 | 504,431 | 504,431 |
| Incremental QALYs | 28,341 | 28,249 | 28,503 |
| Hospitalisations avoided over 5 years | 21,677 | 3461 | 54,013 |
a Costs, QALYs and hospitalisations avoided were calculated for all individuals affected by VLU over 5 years in Australia
Scenario analysis varying prevalence of VLUs (optimal care service delivery Option 1)a
| Prevalence of VLU among 60+ | 0.33% (Baseline) | 0.50% | 1% | 1.69% [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Population 60+ affected with VLU at cycle 0 | 15,973 | 24,202 | 48,404 | 81,803 |
| Total costs in usual care group | $2,831,006,652 | $2,954,936,472 | $3,319,435,945 | $3,822,445,216 |
| Total costs in optimal care group | $1,200,427,937 | $1,246,526,209 | $1,382,109,363 | $1,569,214,116 |
| Total incremental costs | -$1,630,578,715 | -$1,708,410,263 | -$1,937,326,581 | -$2,253,231,100 |
| Total QALYs in usual care group | 476,090 | 499,250 | 567,367 | 661,369 |
| Total QALYs in optimal care group | 504,431 | 528,959 | 601,099 | 700,653 |
| Incremental QALYs | 28,341 | 29,709 | 33,732 | 39,284 |
| Hospitalisations avoided | 21,677 | 22,620 | 25,394 | 29,221 |
aCosts, QALYs and hospitalisations avoided were calculated for all individuals affected by VLU over 5 years in Australia
Fig. 4Probabilistic sensitivity analysis results in cost-effectiveness plane and cost-effectiveness acceptability curve (NSW as an example)