| Literature DB >> 30098940 |
Laura Di Giorgio1, Mercy Mvundura2, Justine Tumusiime3, Chloe Morozoff4, Jane Cover5, Jennifer Kidwell Drake6.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To assess the cost-effectiveness of self-injected subcutaneous depot medroxyprogesterone acetate (DMPA-SC) compared to health-worker-administered intramuscular DMPA (DMPA-IM) in Uganda. STUDYEntities:
Keywords: Cost-effectiveness; DMPA-SC; Economic evaluation; Family planning; Injectable contraception; Self-injection
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30098940 PMCID: PMC6197841 DOI: 10.1016/j.contraception.2018.07.137
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Contraception ISSN: 0010-7824 Impact factor: 3.375
Fig. 1Decision-tree model to compare the costs and effectiveness of self-injected DMPA-SC versus health-worker-administered DMPA-IM.
Key cost inputs, per client (in 2016 US$)
| Parameter | Base case | Data source | Minimum; maximum; |
|---|---|---|---|
| Costs under the health system perspective | |||
| Direct medical costs of DMPA-SC self-injection for 4 injections | $8.11/6.35 | Di Giorgio et al., 2018 | − |
| Direct medical costs for first visit for DMPA-SC self-injection at the health facility | $5.44/3.68 | Di Giorgio et al., 2018 | $2.50 |
| Direct medical costs for each subsequent DMPA-SC self-injection away from the facility | $0.89 | Di Giorgio et al., 2018 | $0.85; $1.78 |
| Direct medical costs of health-worker-administered DMPA-IM for 4 injections | $5.46 | Di Giorgio et al., 2018 | − |
| Direct medical costs for first DMPA-IM injection by a facility-based health worker | $1.65 | Di Giorgio et al., 2018 | $0.83; $3.30 |
| Direct medical costs for each subsequent DMPA-IM injection by a facility-based health worker | $1.27 | Di Giorgio et al., 2018 | $0.83; $2.16 |
| Direct medical costs of the ACM for 0.5 year after discontinuing DMPA-SC | $1.20 | Di Giorgio et al., 2018 | $0.60; $2.40 |
| Direct medical costs of the ACM for 0.5 year after discontinuing DMPA-IM | $0.64 | Di Giorgio et al., 2018 | $0.32; $1.28 |
| Costs under the societal perspective | |||
| Direct medical and direct nonmedical costs of DMPA-SC self-injection for 4 injections | $9.72/$7.96 | Di Giorgio et al., 2018 | − |
| Direct medical and direct nonmedical costs for first visit for DMPA-SC self-injection at the health facility | $6.78/$5.02 | Di Giorgio et al., 2018 | $3.39; $10.88 |
| Direct medical and direct nonmedical costs for each subsequent DMPA-SC self-injection away from the facility | $0.98 | Di Giorgio et al., 2018 | $0.85; $1.78 |
| Direct medical and direct nonmedical costs of health-worker-administered DMPA-IM for 4 injections | $10.12 | Di Giorgio et al., 2018 | − |
| Direct medical and direct nonmedical costs for first DMPA-IM injection by a facility-based health worker | $2.77 | Di Giorgio et al., 2018 | $0.83; $6.38 |
| Direct medical and direct nonmedical costs for each subsequent DMPA-IM injection by a facility-based health worker | $2.45 | Di Giorgio et al., 2018 | $0.83; $3.85 |
| Direct medical and direct nonmedical costs of the ACM for 0.5 year after discontinuing DMPA-SC | $1.82 | Di Giorgio et al., 2018 | $0.91; $3.62 |
| Direct medical and direct nonmedical costs of the ACM for 0.5 year after discontinuing DMPA-IM | $0.88 | Di Giorgio et al., 2018 | $0.44; $1.75 |
| Direct medical costs of pregnancy | |||
| Birth and newborn care costs | $59.43 | Babigumira et al., 2011 | $29.72; $118.86 |
| Miscarriage (between 12 and 22 weeks) | $2.58 | Babigumira et al., 2011 | $1.29; $5.16 |
| Abortion | $88.94 | Babigumira et al., 2011 | $44.47; $177.88 |
Includes medical examination costs; in the case of self-injection, includes training costs.
Includes delivery, antenatal care, postnatal care and newborn care costs.
The range is wide enough to include scenarios where a booklet is used as the training aid and also when the one-page instruction sheet is used.
A lognormal distribution was used in the probabilistic sensitivity analysis.
Key inputs to estimate effectiveness, including contraceptive continuation rates and typical-use effectiveness
| Indicator | Base case (rate) | Data source | Minimum and maximum values used in the sensitivity analysis |
|---|---|---|---|
| Continuation rates | |||
| 12-month continuation rate with DMPA-SC self-injection | 0.81 | Cover et al., 2018 | 0.60; 0.95 |
| 12-month continuation rate with DMPA-IM | 0.65 | Cover et al., 2018 | 0.40; 0.85 |
| Types of contraceptives to which women switched after discontinuing self-injection of DMPA-SC (among those who had already switched to another contraceptive or planned to do so within 30 days) | |||
| Oral contraceptives | 9 | Cover, personal communication, 2017 | See footnote |
| Intrauterine device | 9 | Cover, personal communication, 2017 | |
| DMPA-IM or DMPA-SC administered by a health worker | 69 | Cover, personal communication, 2017 | |
| Implant | 5 | Cover, personal communication, 2017 | |
| Male condoms | 9 | Cover, personal communication, 2017 | |
| Traditional methods | 0 | Cover, personal communication, 2017 | |
| Types of contraceptives to which women switched after discontinuing health-worker-administered DMPA-IM (among those who had already switched to another contraceptive or decided to switch) | |||
| Oral contraceptives | 5 | Cover, personal communication, 2017 | See footnote |
| Intrauterine device | 5 | Cover, personal communication, 2017 | |
| Other injectable administered by a health worker | 5 | Cover, personal communication, 2017 | |
| Implant | 20 | Cover, personal communication, 2017 | |
| Male condoms | 55 | Cover, personal communication, 2017 | |
| Traditional methods | 10 | Cover, personal communication, 2017 | |
| Cumulative effective rates [1−failure rate] of injectables and other contraceptives to which women switched after discontinuation (for 12 months of use in Uganda) | |||
| Injectable effectiveness | 95.6 | Polis, 2016 | 90;97 |
| Oral contraceptives | 87.4 | Polis, 2016 | 83;92 |
| Intrauterine device | 98.8 | Polis, 2016 | 95;100 |
| Implant | 99.2 | Polis, 2016 | 95;100 |
| Male condoms | 94.6 | Polis, 2016 | 90;98 |
| Traditional method (average of withdrawal and periodic abstinence) | 82.1 | Polis, 2016 | 73;87 |
| Weighted average effectiveness of the ACM to which women switched | |||
| ACM effectiveness (typical use) among women who discontinued self-injection of DMPA-SC | 91.3 | Calculated | 85; 100 |
| ACM effectiveness (typical use) among women who discontinued health-worker-administered DMPA-IM | 87.3 | Calculated | 81; 92 |
| Probability of pregnancy outcomes | |||
| Probability of a delivery | 71 | Prada et al. 2016 | See footnote |
| Probability of a miscarriage | 16 | Prada et al. 2016 | |
| Probability of an abortion | 14 | Prada et al. 2016 | |
| Inputs for the DALY calculations | |||
| YLL per maternal death (all causes) | 56.499 | Murray et al., 2010 | NA |
| DALY ratio (YLD/YLL) | 0.103 | Murray et al., 2010 | NA |
Abbreviation: NA, not applicable.
Beta distributions were assumed for the sensitivity analysis, with parameter values of α=2 and β=2.
These percentages are correlated and add to 1. The sensitivity analysis focused on changing the most common method women switched to after discontinuing self-injection of DMPA-SC and adjusted the percentages for the other methods so that the total would still be 100%. In the low scenario, we assumed that less women would switch to injectables provided by a health worker and would switch to less effective methods. We assumed that 40% would use injectables and increased the percentages in the less effective methods. In the high-value scenario, we assumed that 70% of the women would switch to injectables provided by a health worker.
Similar to the above, we modified the most common method used by women discontinuing health-worker-administered DMPA-IM. In the low scenario, we assumed that 20% of the women would switch to using condoms and more would opt for more effective methods. In the high-value scenario, we assumed that 70% of the women would switch to using condoms. Similarly, other percentages were adjusted such that the percentages add to 100%.
These also add to 100% and so were varied at the same time. In the low scenario, we assumed 50% probability of a delivery, 34% abortions and 16% for miscarriage; in the high scenario, we assumed 75% for delivery, 5% abortions and 15% miscarriage.
Cost, effectiveness and incremental cost-effectiveness estimates for a hypothetical cohort of approximately 1 million injectable users in Uganda for a 1-year time horizon (in 2016 US$)
| Costs | Pregnancies averted | Maternal DALYs averted | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Societal: research design | |||
| DMPA-SC | $6,549,568 | 134,402 | 19,998 |
| DMPA-IM | $6,633,425 | 123,575 | 18,378 |
| Incremental | ($83,857) | 10,827 | 1620 |
| Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio | Self-injected DMPA-SC is dominant | Self-injected DMPA-SC is dominant | |
| Societal: programmatic implementation | |||
| DMPA-SC | $5,632,352 | 134,402 | 19,998 |
| DMPA-IM | $6,633,425 | 123,575 | 18,378 |
| Incremental | ($1,001,073) | 10,827 | 1620 |
| Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio | Self-injected DMPA-SC is dominant | Self-injected DMPA-SC is dominant | |
| Health system: research design | |||
| DMPA-SC | $5,667,770 | 134,402 | 19,998 |
| DMPA-IM | $4,592,291 | 123,575 | 18,378 |
| Incremental | $1,075,478 | 10,827 | 1620 |
| Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio | $99/pregnancy averted | $664/DALY averted | |
| Health system: programmatic implementation | |||
| DMPA-SC | $4,750,553 | 134,402 | 19,998 |
| DMPA-IM | $4,592,291 | 123,575 | 18,378 |
| Incremental | $158,262 | 10,827 | 1620 |
| Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio | $15/pregnancy averted | $98/DALY averted | |
Fig. 2One-way sensitivity analysis for the health system perspective (under program design).
Two-way sensitivity analyses results on the incremental cost per DALY averted for self-injection versus provider-administered DMPA-IM
| Variable 1 | Variable 2 | Low of both variables 1 and 2 | Low value of variable 1 and high of variable 2 | High value of variable 1 low value of variable 2 | High of both variables 1 and 2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Direct medical costs for first visit for DMPA-SC self-injection at the health facility | ACM effectiveness among women who discontinued health-worker-administered DMPA-IM | Dominant | $36 | $993 | $11,713 |
| 12-month continuation rate with DMPA-IM | Dominant | Dominant | $1100 | $2414 | |
| Direct medical costs for first DMPA-IM injection by a facility-based health worker | Dominant | Dominant | $2678 | $1883 | |
| ACM effectiveness among women who discontinued self-injection of DMPA-SC | Dominant | Dominant | $6197 | $1173 | |
| Direct medical costs for each subsequent DMPA-SC self-injection away from the facility | Dominant | $468 | $2380 | $3164 | |
| Direct medical costs for each subsequent DMPA-IM injection by a facility-based health worker | $44 | Dominant | $2739 | $1755 | |
| Effectiveness of injectable contraceptives | Dominant | Dominant | $4771 | $2207 | |
| ACM effectiveness among women who discontinued health-worker-administered DMPA-IM | 12-month continuation rate with DMPA-IM | Dominant | $155 | $584 | Dominated |
| Direct medical costs for first DMPA-IM injection by a facility-based health worker | Dominant | Dominant | $2823 | Dominant | |
| ACM effectiveness among women who discontinued self-injection of DMPA-SC | Dominant | Dominant | Dominated | $91 | |
| Direct medical costs for each subsequent DMPA-SC self-injection away from the facility | Dominant | $224 | $1534 | $4930 | |
| Direct medical costs for each subsequent DMPA-IM injection by a facility-based health worker | $16 | Dominant | $3090 | Dominant | |
| Effectiveness of injectable contraceptives | Dominant | Dominant | Dominated | $1339 | |
| 12-month continuation rate with DMPA-IM | Direct medical costs for first DMPA-IM injection by a facility-based health worker | $74 | Dominant | $2773 | Dominant |
| ACM effectiveness among women who discontinued self-injection of DMPA-SC | $66 | Dominant | Dominated | Dominant | |
| Direct medical costs for each subsequent DMPA-SC self-injection away from the facility | Dominant | $317 | $1224 | $5307 | |
| Direct medical costs for each subsequent DMPA-IM injection by a facility-based health worker | $69 | Dominant | $3390 | Dominant | |
| Effectiveness of injectable contraceptives | $328 | Dominant | $743 | $1443 | |
| Direct medical costs for each subsequent DMPA-IM injection by a facility-based health worker | ACM effectiveness among women who discontinued self-injection of DMPA-SC | $1497 | $72 | Dominant | Dominant |
| Direct medical costs for each subsequent DMPA-SC self-injection away from the facility | $390 | $1173 | Dominant | $189 | |
| Effectiveness of injectable contraceptives | Dominated | $719 | $1275 | Dominant | |
| ACM effectiveness among women who discontinued self-injection of DMPA-SC | Direct medical costs for each subsequent DMPA-SC self-injection away from the facility | $120 | $1006 | Dominant | $439 |
| Direct medical costs for each subsequent DMPA-IM injection by a facility-based health worker | $1497 | Dominant | $72 | Dominant | |
| Effectiveness of injectable contraceptives | Dominated | $543 | Dominant | Dominant |
Definitions: The term “dominant” means that self-injection averts more DALYs and costs less than provider-administered DMPA-IM. The term “dominated” describes the opposite situation: self-injection averts less DALYs and costs more than provider-administered DMPA-IM.
Fig. 3Probabilistic sensitivity analysis for the health system perspective (under program design).