| Literature DB >> 32596785 |
Allison Portnoy1, Kelsey Vaughan2, Emma Clarke-Deelder3, Christian Suharlim4,5, Stephen C Resch4, Logan Brenzel6, Nicolas A Menzies4,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To plan for the financial sustainability of immunization programs and make informed decisions to improve immunization coverage and equity, decision-makers need to know how much these programs cost beyond the cost of the vaccine. Non-vaccine delivery cost estimates can significantly influence the cost-effectiveness estimates used to allocate resources at the country level. However, many low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) do not have immunization delivery unit cost estimates available, or have estimates that are uncertain, unreliable, or old. We undertook a Bayesian evidence synthesis to generate country-level estimates of immunization delivery unit costs for LMICs.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32596785 PMCID: PMC7437655 DOI: 10.1007/s40273-020-00930-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacoeconomics ISSN: 1170-7690 Impact factor: 4.981
Model covariates
| Covariate name | Description |
|---|---|
| Labor indicator ( | Labor cost category included in cost per dose = 1; otherwise = 0 |
| Supply chain indicator ( | Supply chain cost category included in cost per dose = 1; otherwise = 0 |
| Service delivery indicator ( | Service delivery cost category included in cost per dose = 1; otherwise = 0 |
| Capital indicator ( | Capital cost category included in cost per dose = 1; otherwise = 0 |
| Year | Study year |
| Econ | Cost type: financial = 0; economic = 1; undefined = 2 |
| Single | Antigens included: full vaccine program = 0; single antigen = 1 |
| log(Doses) | Number of doses in the routine vaccination schedule in study year, logged |
| log(GDP) | GDP per capita in study year, logged |
| DTP3 | DTP3 coverage in study year |
| log(Pop) | Country population size in study year, logged |
DTP3 diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis third dose coverage, GDP gross domestic product, Pop population
Summary characteristics for immunization delivery unit cost per dose data
| Estimates ( | |
|---|---|
| Reported cost per dose | |
| Total cost per dose only | 34 |
| Total + cost categories | 18a |
| Incomeb | |
| Low income | 32 |
| Lower middle income | 16 |
| Upper middle income | 4 |
| Antigens costed | |
| Single antigen | 28 |
| Full vaccination program | 24 |
| Cost type | |
| Economic | 27 |
| Financial | 11 |
| Undefined | 14 |
aThere were 52 total cost per dose observations with reported base years between 2001 and 2017, but the 18 cost per dose estimates that could be disaggregated into cost categories brought the total analyzed observations from 52 to 119
bLow income: gross national income (GNI) per capita of $1025 or less; lower middle income: GNI per capita of $1026–$3995; upper middle income: GNI per capita of $3996–$12,375 [12]. Costs in US dollars
Results for regressions of routine childhood delivery unit cost per dose on predictors
| Variable | Mean coefficient |
|---|---|
| Cost category intercepts | |
| Labor | 0.08 (0.23) |
| Supply chain | − 0.97 (0.26) |
| Service delivery | − 0.07 (0.28) |
| Capital | − 1.16 (0.31) |
| Predictors | |
| Year | − 0.14 (0.13) |
| Economic cost indicator | − 0.06 (0.14) |
| Single antigen indicator | − 0.49 (0.22)* |
| log(Doses) | 0.01 (0.13) |
| log(GDP per capita) | 0.19 (0.13) |
| log(Pop) | − 0.30 (0.12)* |
| DTP3 coverage | 0.29 (0.12)* |
| Gamma dispersion parameter | |
| Alpha | 1.08 (0.07) |
Continuous predictors were standardized to mean zero and unit standard deviation; thus, fitted coefficients for continuous variables [e.g., log(Doses)] represent the increase in log cost per dose observed for a 1.0 standard deviation increase in the variable. Values in parentheses represent standard errors
DTP3 diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis third dose coverage, GDP gross domestic product, Pop population
*Significant at 5% level
Fig. 1Comparison of predicted cost per dose and published literature cost per dose for routine childhood vaccine delivery. The original costs per dose represent 119 observations across 24 countries for reported base years between 2001 and 2017. The predicted costs per dose are matched to the country and year of each observation
Fig. 2Predicted economic cost per dose in 2018 for routine childhood vaccine delivery by GDP per capita and World Bank income level for 136 LIC and middle-income countries. GDP gross domestic product, LIC low-income countries, LMIC lower middle-income countries, UMIC upper middle-income countries
Predicted economic cost per dose (US$) in 2018 for routine childhood vaccine delivery by cost category and world region/income level
| Total cost per dose | Labor cost per dose | Supply chain cost per dose | Service delivery cost per dose | Capital cost per dose | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Region | |||||
| Africa | $1.49 ($0.57–3.31) | $0.59 ($0.23–1.28) | $0.21 ($0.07–0.49) | $0.52 ($0.17–1.23) | $0.17 ($0.06–0.43) |
| Americas | $2.61 ($0.87–6.33) | $1.02 ($0.35–2.42) | $0.37 ($0.11–0.94) | $0.91 ($0.27–2.44) | $0.31 ($0.09–0.81) |
| Eastern Mediterranean | $1.86 ($0.71–4.05) | $0.73 ($0.29–1.56) | $0.26 ($0.09–0.62) | $0.65 ($0.22–1.52) | $0.22 ($0.07–0.52) |
| Europe | $3.51 ($1.21–8.18) | $1.38 ($0.50–3.19) | $0.50 ($0.15–1.25) | $1.22 ($0.38–3.06) | $0.41 ($0.12–1.07) |
| Southeast Asia | $1.35 ($0.40–3.48) | $0.53 ($0.16–1.34) | $0.19 ($0.05–0.52) | $0.47 ($0.13–1.26) | $0.16 ($0.04–0.45) |
| Western Pacific | $2.07 ($0.59–5.47) | $0.81 ($0.24–2.10) | $0.29 ($0.07–0.81) | $0.73 ($0.18–2.09) | $0.24 ($0.06–0.69) |
| Income level | |||||
| Low income | $1.41 ($0.52–3.16) | $0.56 ($0.20–1.24) | $0.20 ($0.07–0.47) | $0.49 ($0.16–1.17) | $0.16 ($0.05–0.41) |
| Lower middle income | $1.36 ($0.44–3.32) | $0.54 ($0.18–1.28) | $0.19 ($0.06–0.50) | $0.47 ($0.14–1.21) | $0.16 ($0.04–0.43) |
| Upper middle income | $2.59 ($0.82–6.38) | $1.01 ($0.34–2.44) | $0.37 ($0.10–0.95) | $0.91 ($0.25–2.39) | $0.30 ($0.08–0.81) |
Countries included in each World Health Organization (WHO) region are low- and middle-income countries according to World Bank income level in 2019 [12]
Fig. 3Predicted programmatic, economic cost per dose for routine childhood vaccine delivery by year. Armenia = European region, lower middle income; Haiti = region of the Americas, low income; Lebanon = Eastern Mediterranean region, upper middle income; Tanzania = African region, low income; Thailand = Southeast Asian region, upper middle income; Vietnam = Western Pacific region, lower middle income
| Immunization delivery costs are a necessary component of high-quality cost-effectiveness models, and are also used to inform resource mobilization for immunization programs. |
| Our study provides estimates produced via meta-regression analyses that can help improve resource mobilization and planning in situations where empirical cost data are unavailable or of low quality. |