| Literature DB >> 32334551 |
Jifan Wang1, Michelle A Lee Bravatti2, Elizabeth J Johnson2, Gowri Raman3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Heart disease is the leading cause of death in the United States. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved the health claim that 1.5 oz (42.5 g) of nut intake may reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease. Previous studies have focused on the cost-effectiveness of other foods or dietary factors on primary cardiovascular disease prevention, yet not in almond consumption. This study aimed to examine the cost-effectiveness of almond consumption in cardiovascular disease primary prevention. PERSPECTIVE &Entities:
Keywords: Almond; Cardiovascular disease; Cost-effectiveness analysis; Heart disease; Myocardial infarction; Stroke
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32334551 PMCID: PMC7183588 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-020-08642-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Decision-making model. The blue square is the decision node. Green circles are chance nodes. Red triangles are terminal nodes. CABG = coronary artery bypass graft; CHD = chronic heart disease; LDL-C = low-density lipoprotein cholesterol; MI = myocardial infarction; PTCA = percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty
Input Parameters in the Decision-making Model and Source
| Parameter | Value | Distribution | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Probability | |||
| Increase in LDL-C | 29% (almond) | – | Tan et al. [ |
| 41% ± 12% (almond) | Beta | Tan et al.[8]a | |
| 44% (non-almond) | – | Tan et al.[8]a | |
| For CVD patients | 25% (almond) | – | Chen et al. [ |
| 35% (non-almond) | – | Chen et al. [ | |
| Developing MI | 0.38% | – | Pikula et al. [ |
| 3.75%* | – | Pikula et al. [ | |
| 1.04% ± 0.91% | Beta | Multiple sources [ | |
| Death due to MI | 14% | – | Benjamin et al. [ |
| Taking CABG | 0.11% | – | Epstein et al. [ |
| Death due to CABG | 1.85% | – | Eisenberg et al. [ |
| Taking PTCA | 0.37% | – | Epstein et al. [ |
| Death due to PTCA | 1.82% | – | Benjamin et al. [ |
| Developing stroke | 0.25% | – | Pikula et al. [ |
| 2.46%* | – | Pikula et al. [ | |
| 0.099% ± 0.11% | Beta | Multiple sources [ | |
| Recurrent stroke | 30.33% | – | Benjamin et al. [ |
| Death due to stroke | 21.82% | – | Benjamin et al. [ |
| Cost (in 2012 USD) | |||
| Almond | $156b | – | Trader Joe’s [ |
| $1369* | – | Trader Joe’s [ | |
| Organic almond | $470 | – | US market price [ |
| CABG Procedure | $37,448 | – | Cohen et al. [ |
| Sensitivity | $29,609 | – | Caruba et al. [ |
| Follow-up of CABG | $6918 | – | Cohen et al. [ |
| $60,548* | – | Cohen et al. [ | |
| Failure to Rescue after CABG | $5733c | – | Cohen et al. [ |
| PCI Procedure | $31,036 | – | Cohen et al. [ |
| Sensitivity | $13,688 | – | Caruba et al. [ |
| Follow-up of PCI | $9489 | – | Cohen et al. [ |
| $83,050* | – | Cohen et al. [ | |
| Failure to Rescue after PCI | $9243c | – | Cohen et al. [ |
| Treatment to Acute MI | $14,697 | – | Cohen et al. [ |
| Treatment to Chronic Heart Disease | $3365 | – | Caruba et al. [ |
| $45,709* | – | Caruba et al. [ | |
| Recurrent Stroke | $61,988 | – | Engel-Nitz et al. [ |
| $330,528* | – | Engel-Nitz et al. [ | |
| Death due to Stroke | $11,377 | – | Russo & Andrews [ |
| Utilities | |||
| Disease free | 1 QALY | – | – |
| 8.75 QALYs* | – | – | |
| Successful CABG | 0.82 QALY | – | Elizabeth et al. [ |
| 7.14 QALYs* | – | Elizabeth et al. [ | |
| Successful PCI | 0.85 QALY | – | Elizabeth et al. [ |
| 7.44 QALYs* | – | Elizabeth et al. [ | |
| Chronic Heart Disease | 0.86 QALY | – | Bakhai et al. [ |
| 7.53 QALYs* | – | Bakhai et al. [ | |
| Recurrent Stroke | 0.48 QALY | – | Nelson et al. [ |
| 4.20 QALYs* | – | Nelson et al. [ | |
| Death | 0 QALY | – | – |
Abbreviations: CABG = coronary artery bypass graft; LDL-C = low-density lipoprotein cholesterol; MI = myocardial infarction; PCI = percutaneous coronary intervention; PTCA = percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty. Note that PTCA and PCI were used interchangeably in data collection. aData is obtained from the request to author. bCost of almond was calculated based on the price of $4.99/lb. and consuming 42.5 g almond every day. cFailure to rescue after procedures includes the cost of re-hospitalizations, physician fees, outpatient services, and medication cost. *Highlighted data was used in the 10-year model
Results of Decision Model and Sensitivity Analyses
| Cost | ΔC | Outcome (QALYs) | ΔE (QALYs) | C/E | ICER | NMB | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Decision model | |||||||
| Non-almond | 1524 | Ref | 0.94 | Ref | 1625 | Dominated | 45,373 |
| Almond | 1161 | −363 | 0.96 | 0.02 | 1211 | 46,794 | |
| Non-almond | 1524 | Ref | 0.94 | Ref | 1625 | Dominated | 92,270 |
| Almond | 1161 | −363 | 0.96 | 0.02 | 1211 | 94,749 | |
| Non-almond | 1524 | Ref | 0.94 | Ref | 1625 | Dominated | 186,064 |
| Almond | 1161 | −363 | 0.96 | 0.02 | 1211 | 190,658 | |
| Sensitivity–Probabilistic Sensitivity Analysis | |||||||
| Non-almond | 1555 ± 59 | Ref | 0.94 ± 0.0005 | Ref | 1658 ± 63 | 45,333 ± 84 | |
| Almond | 1589 ± 417 | 34 ± 414 | 0.94 ± 0.02 | 0.005 ± 0.02 | 1694 ± 474 | −26,798 ± 814,514 | 45,542 ± 1245 |
| Sensitivity–10-year model | |||||||
| Non-almond | 20,871 | Ref | 8.13 | Ref | 2566 | Dominated | 385,788 |
| Almond | 15,120 | −5750 | 8.37 | 0.24 | 1806 | 403,377 | |
| Sensitivity–cost of procedure | |||||||
| Non-almond | 1524 | Ref | 0.94 | Ref | 1625 | Dominated | 45,373 |
| Almond | 1161 | −363 | 0.96 | 0.02 | 1210 | 46,794 | |
| Sensitivity–cost of almond | |||||||
| Non-almond | 1524 | Ref | 0.94 | Ref | 1625 | Dominated | 45,373 |
| Higher cost of almond | 1474 | −50 | 0.96 | 0.02 | 1537 | 46,480 | |
| Sensitivity–CVD patients | |||||||
| Non-almond | 1213 | Ref | 0.86 | Ref | 1411 | Dominated | 41,766 |
| Almond | 1022 | −190 | 0.86 | 0.0001 | 1189 | 41,962 | |
Abbreviations: C/E cost-effectiveness ratio, ICER incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, NMB net monetary benefit, QALY quality-adjusted life years, WTP willingness-to-pay
Fig. 2Scatter plot of estimated incremental cost ($) and incremental effectiveness (QALYs) of 1.5 oz almond versus non-almond from the probability sensitivity analysis. Dashed lines denote the willingness-to-pay (WTP) at $50,000, $100,000, and $200,000, respectively. The area to the right of the WTP indicates the almond strategy being cost-effective
Fig. 3Cost-effectiveness accessibility curve (CEAC) of multiple thresholds for willingness-to-pay (WTP). Red triangles depict no almond; blue squares depict 1.5 oz almond. The WTP for health care ranged from $50,000-per-QALY to $200,000-per-QALY. The CEAC shows the probability of a strategy being the more cost-effective alternative under different thresholds of WTP