| Literature DB >> 32019528 |
Carlos K H Wong1, Julie Chen2,3, Samuel K S Fung4, Maggie Mok5, Yuk Lun Cheng6, Irene Kong4, Wai Kei Lo5, Sing Leung Lui5, T M Chan7, Cindy L K Lam2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This study aimed to determine the lifetime cost-effectiveness of first-line dialysis modalities for end-stage renal disease (ESRD) patients under the "Peritoneal Dialysis First" policy.Entities:
Keywords: Cost-effectiveness; Dialysis; Economic burden; End-stage renal disease; Nocturnal home haemodialysis; Peritoneal dialysis first
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32019528 PMCID: PMC7001205 DOI: 10.1186/s12882-020-1708-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nephrol ISSN: 1471-2369 Impact factor: 2.388
Unit cost of each healthcare service related to patients with end-stage renal disease
| Healthcare service | Cost (USD) | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| General outpatient clinic (per visit) | 57.1 | Hospital Authority [ |
| Specialist outpatient clinic (per visit) | 152.6 | Hospital Authority [ |
| Accident and emergency (per visit) | 157.7 | Hospital Authority [ |
| Hospital stay (per night) | 653.8 | Hospital Authority [ |
| Haemodialysis (per session) | 384.6 | Hospital Authority [ |
| PD home machine rental consumables, maintenance and insurance (per month) | 641.0 | Personal communication with nephrologists |
| Home-based HD machine rental and consumables (per month) | 769.2 | Personal communication with nephrologists |
| Pre-dialysis access surgery | ||
| PD: insertion / removal of peritoneal dialysis catheter | 3192.3 | Hospital Authority [ |
| HD: Insertion / removal of haemodialysis catheter b | 2057.7 | Hospital Authority [ |
| HD: Arteriovenostomy for renal dialysis (arteriovenous fistula, arteriovenous graft) b | 6384.6 | Hospital Authority [ |
| Renal transplantation | 10,278.8 | Hospital Authority [ |
| Post-transplant follow-upc | Personal communication with nephrologists | |
| Initial year | 1678.2 | |
| Subsequent years | 610.3 | |
| Dialysis traininga | Personal communication with nephrologists | |
| PDd | 1692.3 | |
| Hospital-based HD | 0 | |
| Home-based HD | 12,184.6 | |
| Re-training after peritonitisa,d | Personal communication with nephrologists | |
| PD | 1692.3 | |
aDialysis training cost for PD = USD42.3 × 8 h × 5 days × 1 week = USD1392.3; Hospital-based HD = 0; Dialysis training cost for Home-based HD = USD42.3 × 8 h × 3 days × 12 weeks = USD12184.6.
(Median hourly wage of Registered Nurse in 2017 = USD42.3)
bThe ratio for HD: Insertion / removal of haemodialysis catheter vs. Arteriovenostomy for renal dialysis (arteriovenous fistula, arteriovenous graft) = 3:7, with reference to recommendation by nephrologists
c Post-transplant patients in initial year were assumed to attend eleven times at specialist outpatient clinics (USD152.6 × 11 times = USD1678.2). Post-transplant patients in second years were assumed to attend four times at specialist outpatient clinics (USD152.6 × 4 times = USD610.3)
dPD patients are required for re-training after every 5 years for PD life extension
Fig. 1Annual transition between health states in lifetime simulation
Summary list of assumptions on the model structure, transition and parameters
| Model Structure | |
| Health Status Transitions within one-year cycle | |
| • There are five principal health status: ‘PD’, ‘hospital-based HD’, ‘home-based HD’, ‘transplant and post-transplant’, and ‘death’ | |
| • ESRD patients commencing home-based HD are prohibited from switching treatment modality to PD as there were no observed data / documented data from literature / data source | |
| • Post-transplanted patients are prohibited from modality switching to any forms of dialysis | |
| • Renal transplantation rates are identical for ESRD patients on any forms of dialysis. | |
| • Annual mortality rates depend on current treatment modality, but independent of previous or initial treatment modalities if the change in treatment modality occur | |
| Model Parameters | |
| Healthcare resource use and cost | |
| • Costs associated with each treatment modality (PD, hospital-based HD, home-based HD, transplant) are divided into initial year (or first year) and subsequent years (retaining the same treatment modality for 2 years or above) | |
| • Cost of pre-dialysis surgery accrues when patient initiates new dialysis | |
| • Cost of the surgery related to the removal of catheter / vascular access accrues when patient switches to another dialysis or undergoes renal transplantation | |
| • No removal of vascular access when patient switches from hospital-based HD to home-based HD and vice versa | |
| • No removal of catheter / vascular access when patient switches from any treatment modality to death | |
| • Dialysis complication is reflected in the number of outpatient visits, emergency visits, and the number of hospitalization days | |
| • Costs associated with renal transplantation and pre-dialysis surgery refer to the list of private charges to cost item in Hospital Authority. The charge covers surgeon fee, administration of anaesthetics, medicines used in operation, and operating theatre expenses | |
| • Cost of chronic haemodialysis, rather than acute haemodialys, is charged to each session of hospital-based HD | |
| • Unit costs of cadaveric and living-related transplantations, and transplantations performed outside HK are the same | |
| Health utility | |
| • Utility decrements depends on the current treatment modality. Utility decrements due to age, duration of ESRD, and duration of dialysis initiation are not taken into account |
Parameter values, ranges (95% confidence interval) and distributions used in the base-case scenario
| Model parameter | Mean | SD | 95% CI | Distribution | Parameter | Reference | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| lower | upper | ||||||||
| Clinical | |||||||||
| Renal transplantation rate | 0.0794 | Leung 2015 [ | |||||||
| Mortality rate (cases/100 person-years) | |||||||||
| PD | 15.21 | Ho 2013 [ | |||||||
| Hospital-based HD | 19.45 | Ho 2013 [ | |||||||
| Home-based HD | 10.6 | Rydell 2019 [ | |||||||
| Post-transplant patients | 2.00 | Ho 2013 [ | |||||||
| Annual probability of modality switching | Dirichlet | ||||||||
| PD → | 159 | 19 | 1 | ||||||
| PD | 0.888 | Data from cost analysis | |||||||
| Hospital-based HD | 0.106 | Data from cost analysis | |||||||
| Home-based HD | 0.006 | Data from cost analysis | |||||||
| Hospital-based HD → | 131 | 26 | 10 | ||||||
| Hospital-based HD | 0.784 | Data from cost analysis | |||||||
| PD | 0.156 | Data from cost analysis | |||||||
| Home-based HD | 0.060 | Data from cost analysis | |||||||
| Home-based HD → | Beta | (alpha, | beta) | ||||||
| Home-based HD | 0.950 | 41 | 2 | McFarlane 2006 [ | |||||
| Hospital-based HD | 0.050 | McFarlane 2006 [ | |||||||
| PD | 0.000 | assumption | |||||||
| Disutility | Gamma | (alpha, | beta) | ||||||
| PD | 0.222 | 0.110 | 0.200 | 0.243 | 4.06 | 0.055 | Chen 2016 [ | ||
| Hospital-based HD | 0.269 | 0.114 | 0.249 | 0.288 | 5.58 | 0.048 | Chen 2016 [ | ||
| Home-based HD | 0.222 | 0.091 | 0.194 | 0.250 | 5.94 | 0.037 | Wong 2019 [ | ||
| Transplant and post-transplant | 0.190 | 0.492 | 0.100 | 0.280 | 17.12 | 0.011 | Liem 2008 [ | ||
| Annual costs | |||||||||
| Societal perspective | Gamma | (alpha, | beta) | ||||||
| Total annual cost in initial year (USD) | |||||||||
| PD | 24,255.3 | 7914.7 | 23,658.7 | 24,851.9 | 9.4 | 2582.7 | Wong 2019 [ | ||
| Hospital-based HD | 57,968.0 | 9400.9 | 57,240.6 | 58,695.5 | 38.0 | 1524.6 | Wong 2019 [ | ||
| Home-based HD | 31,030.6 | 3625.8 | 30,477.6 | 31,583.5 | 73.2 | 423.7 | Wong 2019 [ | ||
| Total annual cost in subsequent year (USD) | |||||||||
| PD | 19,425.6 | 7737.6 | 18,842.4 | 20,008.9 | 6.3 | 3082.0 | Wong 2019 [ | ||
| Hospital-based HD | 52,950.9 | 9423.3 | 52,221.7 | 53,680.1 | 31.6 | 1677.0 | Wong 2019 [ | ||
| Home-based HD | 13,552.3 | 3058.0 | 13,085.9 | 14,018.6 | 19.6 | 690.0 | Wong 2019 [ | ||
| Healthcare provider perspective | Gamma | (alpha, | beta) | ||||||
| Total annual cost in initial year (USD) | |||||||||
| PD | 15,188.1 | 1994.8 | 15,037.8 | 15,338.5 | 58.0 | 262.0 | Wong 2019 [ | ||
| Hospital-based HD | 51,289.4 | 8054.0 | 50,666.1 | 51,912.6 | 40.6 | 1264.7 | Wong 2019 [ | ||
| Home-based HD | 28,635.7 | 2314.8 | 28,282.7 | 28,988.7 | 153.0 | 187.1 | Wong 2019 [ | ||
| Total annual cost in subsequent year (USD) | |||||||||
| PD | 10,358.5 | 2028.2 | 10,205.6 | 10,511.4 | 26.1 | 397.1 | Wong 2019 [ | ||
| Hospital-based HD | 46,272.2 | 8078.7 | 45,647.1 | 46,897.4 | 32.8 | 1410.5 | Wong 2019 [ | ||
| Home-based HD | 11,157.4 | 1161.4 | 10,980.3 | 11,334.5 | 92.3 | 120.9 | Wong 2019 [ | ||
CI Confidence Interval, SD Standard deviation;
Lifetime cost (USD) of each dialysis modality strategy as first-line treatment and incremental cost-effectiveness ratio in base-case scenario
| Perspective | Strategy | Cost (USD) | Incremental Cost (USD) | Effectiveness (QALY) | Incremental Effectiveness | ICER (USD / QALY gained) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Healthcare provider | ||||||
| PDa | 76,915 | NA | 7.13 | NA | NA | |
| Home-based HD | 97,917 | 21,002 | 8.37 | 1.24 | 16,934 | |
| Hospital-based HD | 142,389 | 44,472 | 6.58 | Dominated by PD | ||
| Societal | ||||||
| PDa | 109,668 | NA | 7.13 | NA | NA | |
| Home-based HD | 111,150 | 1482 | 8.37 | 1.24 | 1195 | |
| Hospital-based HD | 166,648 | 56,980 | 6.58 | Dominated by PD | ||
NA Not applicable, QALY quality-adjusted life-year, ICER incremental cost-effectiveness ratio
aPD is the reference category when calculating incremental cost and incremental effectiveness
Fig. 2Tornado diagrams for one-way sensitivity analysis of incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of home-based haemodialysis relative to peritoneal dialysis a) from the healthcare provider perspective and b) from the societal perspective
Fig. 3Cost-effectiveness acceptability curve a) from the healthcare provider perspective; and b) from the societal perspective