| Literature DB >> 31856377 |
Yinzong Xiao1,2,3, Jessica Howell1,2,3,4, Caroline van Gemert1,3, Alexander J Thompson2,3, Christopher P Seaman1,4, Karen McCulloch3,5,6,7, Nick Scott1,4, Margaret E Hellard1,3,4,7,8,9.
Abstract
If Australia is to successfully eliminate hepatitis B as a public health threat, it will need to enhance the chronic hepatitis B (CHB) care cascade. This study used a Markov model to assess the impact, cost and cost-effectiveness of scaling up CHB diagnosis, linkage to care and treatment to reach national and international elimination targets for hepatitis B in Australia. Compared to continued current trends, the model calculated the difference in care cascade projection, disability-adjusted life years (DALYs), costs and the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER), of scaling up CHB diagnosis, linkage to care and treatment to reach: (a) Australia's 2022 national targets and (b) the WHO's 2030 global targets. Achieving the national and WHO targets had ICERs of A$13 435 (A$10 236-A$21 165) and A$14 482 (A$13 031-A$25 641) per DALY averted between 2016 and 2030 in Australia, respectively. However, this excluded implementation and demand generation costs. The ICER for the National Strategy and WHO Strategy remained under A$50 000 per DALY averted if Australia spent up to A$328 or A$538 million, respectively, per annum (for 2016-2030) on implementation and demand generation activities. Sensitivity analysis showed that cost-effectiveness was predominately driven by the cost of CHB treatment and influenced by disease progression rates. Hence for Australia to reach the National Hepatitis B Strategy 2022 targets and WHO Strategy 2030 targets, it requires an improvement in the CHB care cascade. We estimated it is cost-effective to spend up to A$328 million or A$538 million per year to reach the National and WHO Strategy targets, respectively.Entities:
Keywords: care cascade; cost-effectiveness analysis; hepatitis B
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31856377 DOI: 10.1111/jvh.13252
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Viral Hepat ISSN: 1352-0504 Impact factor: 3.728