| Literature DB >> 30571234 |
Fionnuala Mone1, James F O'Mahony2, Ella Tyrrell2, Cecilia Mulcahy1, Peter McParland1, Fionnuala Breathnach3, John J Morrison4, John Higgins5, Sean Daly6, Amanda Cotter7, Alyson Hunter8, Patrick Dicker3, Elizabeth Tully2,3, Fergal D Malone3, Charles Normand2,9, Fionnuala M McAuliffe1.
Abstract
The objective was to evaluate whether routine aspirin 75 mg is more cost-effective than the Fetal Medicine Foundation screen-and-treat approach for preeclampsia prevention in low-risk nulliparous women. A health economic decision analytical model was devised to estimate the discounted net health and cost outcomes of routine aspirin versus Fetal Medicine Foundation screening test-indicated aspirin for a cohort of 100 000 low-risk nulliparous women. Both strategies were compared with no intervention. A subanalysis also compared disaggregated components of the algorithm. The analysis used data from hospital administration, literature, and a randomized controlled trial. Sensitivity analyses assessed the impact of aspirin adherence, test cost, and accuracy on study results. Presumed rates of preeclampsia were 3.75% with no intervention versus 0.45% with aspirin use. Results found that routine aspirin was the preferred strategy, in terms of greater health gains and larger cost savings. It provided 163 quality-adjusted life-years relative to no intervention, whereas the screen-and-treat policy achieved 108 quality-adjusted life-years. Routine aspirin would result in an estimated cost saving of €14.9 million annually relative to no intervention, whereas screen-and-treat approach would result in a smaller cost saving of €3.1 million. When the analysis was extended to consider alternative screen-and-treat strategies, routine aspirin remained the optimally cost-effective approach. In conclusion, routine aspirin use in low-risk nulliparous women has a greater health gain and cost saving compared with both the Fetal Medicine Foundation and other screen-and-treat approaches.Entities:
Keywords: aspirin; biomarkers; cost analysis; preeclampsia; pregnancy; prevention
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30571234 DOI: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.118.11718
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hypertension ISSN: 0194-911X Impact factor: 10.190