| Literature DB >> 32814581 |
Jeanette Dawa1,2, Gideon O Emukule3, Edwine Barasa4,5, Marc Alain Widdowson6,7, Omu Anzala8, Edwin van Leeuwen9, Marc Baguelin10,11, Sandra S Chaves3,12, Rosalind M Eggo10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is substantial burden of seasonal influenza in Kenya, which led the government to consider introducing a national influenza vaccination programme. Given the cost implications of a nationwide programme, local economic evaluation data are needed to inform policy on the design and benefits of influenza vaccination. We set out to estimate the cost-effectiveness of seasonal influenza vaccination in Kenya.Entities:
Keywords: Cost-effectiveness; Dynamic transmission model; Economic evaluation; Influenza vaccine; Low- and middle-income countries; Vaccine target group; Vaccine timing
Year: 2020 PMID: 32814581 PMCID: PMC7438179 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-020-01687-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Vaccination scenarios modelled in three age groups and four vaccination timings
| Vaccination timing and uptake | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A: | B: | C: | D: | ||
| 30% | 30% | 45% | 60% | ||
| 35% | 35% | 50% | 65% | ||
| 40% | 40% | 55% | 70% | ||
Coverage values were set based on influenza vaccination studies in Kenya [25] and local consultation.
NH Northern Hemisphere, SH Southern Hemisphere
Values for disease states and heath utilisation rates used in economic model. Mean and 95% confidence interval (CI) or proportions are given
| Item | Measure | Value | Distribution | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proportion of influenza cases that develop any clinical symptoms | Mean (95% CI) | 0.669 (0.583–0.745) | Normal | [ |
| Proportion of influenza cases that develop upper respiratory tract symptoms/mild illness | Mean (95% CI) | 0.588 (0.455–0.708) | Normal | [ |
| Proportion of influenza cases that develop lower respiratory tract symptoms/severe illness | Mean (95% CI) | 0.210 (0.140–0.303) | Normal | [ |
| Proportion of influenza cases with severe illness that die while hospitalised | ||||
| Mean (95% CI) | 0.0274 (0–0.0616) | Truncated normal | Influenza SARI surveillance dataset (2010–2018) | |
| Mean (95% CI) | 0.0091 (0–0.0322) | |||
| Mean (95% CI) | 0.0108 (0–0.0902) | |||
| Mean (95% CI) | 0 (0–0.1116) | |||
| Mean (95% CI) | 0.0331 (0–0.0818) | |||
| | Mean (95% CI) | 0.1818 (0.0909–0.3080) | ||
| Mean (95% CI) | 0.0200 (0.0035–0.0373) | |||
| Proportion of deaths due to a respiratory illness that occur in a health facility | ||||
| | Mean (95% CI) | 0.2794 (0.2451–0.3140) | Normal | Siaya health demographic and surveillance site dataset (2010–2016) |
| Mean (95% CI) | 0.2899 (0.2471–0.3349) | |||
| Mean (95% CI) | 0.4361 (0.3534–0.5278) | |||
| Mean (95% CI) | 0.5250 (0.3750–0.6795) | |||
| Mean (95% CI) | 0.5067 (0.4626–0.5525) | |||
| | Mean (95% CI) | 0.2715 (0.2421–0.3012) | ||
| Mean (95% CI) | 0.3287 (0.3106–0.3474) | |||
| Proportion of symptomatic influenza cases who attend outpatient clinic | ||||
| Mean (95% CI) | 0.475 (0.39–0.60) | Normal | [ | |
| Mean (95% CI) | 0.118 (0.09–0.17) | |||
| Mean (95% CI) | 0.088 (0.06–0.13) | |||
| Mean (95% CI) | 0.035 (0.02–0.08) | |||
| Mean (95% CI) | 0.034 (0.02–0.07) | |||
| Mean (95% CI) | 0.027 (0.01–0.05) | |||
| | Mean (95% CI) | 0.036 (0.02–0.07) | ||
| Proportion of symptomatic influenza cases who are hospitalised | ||||
| Mean (95% CI) | 0.0102 (0.0089–0.0117) | Normal | [ | |
| Mean (95% CI) | 0.0007 (0.0006–0.0010) | |||
| Mean (95% CI) | 0.0006 (0.0004–0.0011) | |||
| Mean (95% CI) | 0.0008 (0.0006–0.0010) | |||
| Mean (95% CI) | 0.0021 (0.0018–0.0024) | |||
| Mean (95% CI) | 0.0026 (0.0020–0.0033) | |||
| | Mean (95% CI) | 0.0033 (0.0025–0.0044) | ||
| Proportion of outpatient influenza cases who purchased medication prior to clinic visit | Proportion | 0.718 | Fixed value | [ |
| Proportion of hospitalised influenza cases who sought care after discharge from hospital | Proportion | 0.105 | Fixed value | [ |
| Proportion of non-medically attended influenza cases where household members missed work due to illness* | Proportion | Not known | – | – |
| Proportion of outpatient influenza cases where household members missed work due to illness | Proportion | 0.518 | Fixed value | [ |
| Proportion of hospitalised influenza cases where household members missed work due to illness | Proportion | 0.848 | Fixed value | [ |
| Proportion of non-medically attended influenza cases where household members paid for childcare during illness* | Proportion | Not known | – | – |
| Proportion of outpatient influenza cases where household members paid for childcare during illness | Proportion | 0.18 | Fixed value | [ |
| Proportion of hospitalised influenza cases where household members paid for childcare during illness | Proportion | 0.29 | Fixed value | [ |
*These items were not included in the model as the values were unknown and difficult to estimate in the case of non-medically attended illness
Fig. 1Summary of costs associated with influenza illness and vaccination. Shading of boxes: white = direct medical costs paid by government (presupposes a universal healthcare scheme with government as the main healthcare payer), blue = healthcare-related costs paid by individual, orange = indirect costs paid by individual
Cost of influenza-associated illness in US dollars showing year of valuation
| Type of cost | Measure | Value in USD | Year | Distribution | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Facility based medical costs among influenza cases attending outpatient clinic | Mean (SD) | 4.34 (1.30) | 2014 | Normal | [ |
| Facility based medical costs among hospitalised influenza cases | Mean (SD) | 59.19 (59.39) | 2014 | Normal | [ |
| Health care costs after discharge among hospitalised influenza cases who sought care after discharge | Mean (SD) | 3.28 (6.19) | Normal | [ | |
| Influenza vaccine purchase costs per dose (varied in sensitivity analysis) | Fixed | 3 | 2018 | Fixed value | Assumption |
| Vaccine administration cost per dose | |||||
| Supply chain cost per dose from national level to the health facility | Mean | 0.43 | 2012 | Fixed value | [ |
| Provision of immunisation services at the health facility | Mean (SD) | 1.0 (0.72) | 2012 | Normal | [ |
| Transportation costs among influenza cases attending outpatient clinic | Mean (SD) | 0.40 (0.87) | 2014 | Normal | [ |
| Transportation costs among hospitalised influenza cases | Mean (SD) | 5.03 (8.32) | 2014 | Normal | [ |
| Transportation costs to receive vaccine at health facility | Man (SD) | 0.20 (0.435) | 2014 | Normal | Assumption* |
| Health care costs prior to outpatient visit among influenza cases who purchased medication before the outpatient visit | Mean (SD) | 1.39 (3.90) | 2014 | Normal | [ |
| Lost wages among influenza cases not seeking formal health care for mild illness | Fixed | 0 | – | Fixed value | Assumption |
| Lost wages among influenza cases attending outpatient visit who report that household members missed work | Mean (SD) | 12.84 (27.17) | 2014 | Normal | [ |
| Lost wages among hospitalised influenza cases who report that household members missed work | Mean (SD) | 42.02 (41.54) | 2014 | Normal | [ |
| Lost wages among those not hospitalised with severe influenza illness | – | Not known | – | – | – |
| Childcare costs among influenza cases attending outpatient clinic who report household members paid for childcare | Mean (SD) | 0.07 (0.57) | 2014 | Normal | [ |
| Childcare costs among hospitalised influenza cases who report household members paid for childcare | Mean (SD) | 0.11 (0.75) | 2014 | Normal | [ |
| Childcare among those not hospitalised for severe influenza illness | – | Not known | – | – | – |
*For this cost no data existed and an assumption was made that the cost would be half of the transportation costs for outpatient care
In the case where no data was available for costs incurred by non-medically attended cases, these costs were not included in the model
SD standard deviation
Fig. 2Comparison of the fit of the model to weekly influenza-positive SARI cases in all ages. Positive cases detected in the influenza surveillance system (black) with hypergeometric 95% confidence interval. Lines and shading represent the median (red) and 50% (green) and 75% credible intervals (blue) of the fitted model. Note that the model is fitted to age-specific data, but age groups are aggregated here for clarity. a Influenza B. b Influenza A(H3N2). c Influenza A(H1N1)pdm09). Influenza A(H1N1)pdm09) data from January 2010 to December 2012 were excluded from the analysis
Periods of high influenza activity, 2010–2018
| Year | NH season | Subtype | Vaccine match | SH season | Subtype | Vaccine match |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jan 2010–Aug 2010 | 03/2010–12/2010 | A(H3N2) | M | |||
| 2010–2011 | 12/2010–08/2011 | B | M | 08/2011–03/2012 | B | M |
| 2011–2012 | 12/2011–05/2012 | A(H3N2) | U | |||
| 2012–2013 | 05/2013–12/2013 | B | M | |||
| 2013–2014 | 12/2013–09/2014 | A(H1N1)pdm09 | M | |||
| 2014–2015 | ||||||
| 2015–2016 | 11/2015–05/2016 | B | M | 03/2016–11/2016 | A(H3N2) | U |
| 2016–2017 | ||||||
| 2017–2018 | 09/2017–06/2018 | B | U | 06/2018–12/2018 | A(H3N2)* | U |
| 01/2018–10/2018 | A(H1N1)pdm09 | M |
An influenza year begins in September and ends in August the following year. “M” means the vaccine was well matched to circulating strains (VE = 70%) [16]. “U” means vaccine was poorly matched to circulating strains (VE = 42%) [16]. Blank cells indicate no detectable peak in influenza activity. *There were no SH VE estimates available at the time, and we used VE values for the NH vaccine
Fig. 3Influenza burden in the absence of vaccination in all age groups, 2010–2018. Mean and 95% credible interval shown for each calendar year (September–August). a Influenza infections, upper respiratory tract infections and lower respiratory tract infections. b Deaths. c DALYs. d Outpatient visits. e Hospitalisations. f Costs. Note that y-axes vary. There were three periods of high influenza activity in Sep 2017–Aug 2018, two periods of high influenza activity in Sep 2010–Aug 2011 and Sep 2015–Aug 2016. Years with no detectable periods of high influenza activity are not included in the figure
Fig. 4Summary of annual mean incremental cost, reductions in infections and vaccine doses per strategy. a Annual reduction in number of infections and incremental total societal costs per strategy. b Annual reduction in number of infections and vaccine doses per vaccine strategy. c Annual incremental total societal costs and vaccine doses costs per strategy. Strategies are vaccinating children 6–23 months (strategy I), 2–5 years (strategy II) and 6–14 years (strategy III) with either the Southern Hemisphere influenza vaccine (Strategy A) or Northern Hemisphere vaccine (Strategy B) or both (Strategy C: twice yearly 3-month vaccination periods, or Strategy D: year-round vaccination). The points mark posterior mean estimates and lines 95% credible intervals
Average annual total societal costs and 95% credible intervals (CIs) per vaccination strategy in millions of USD
| Strategy | ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | II | III | ||||||||||
| Year | A | B | C | D | A | B | C | D | A | B | C | D |
| 2010 | 10.47 (4.99–22.4) | 12.3 (5.58–26.8) | 13.22 (7.12–26.02) | 15.52 (9.08–28.28) | 14.53 (9.47–23.82) | 18.44 (10.87–33.1) | 20.02 (13.42–31.01) | 24.77 (17.12–36.28) | 28.65 (21.06–38.28) | 35.14 (24.28–51.56) | 39.53 (29.07–52.79) | 50.31 (37.05–66.96) |
| 2010–11 | 25.7 (9.89–58.27) | 25.32 (9.79–57.84) | 27.2 (11.9–58.74) | 29.96 (14.23–62.08) | 30.6 (15.28–61.51) | 29.75 (15.14–59.51) | 33.38 (18.94–61.44) | 39.04 (23.2–68.8) | 44.11 (28.7–70.93) | 44.27 (28.78–70.65) | 50.86 (35.6–72.91) | 63.32 (44.63–89.53) |
| 2011–12 | 27.85 (10.44–63.18) | 26.96 (10.19–61.17) | 29.64 (12.57–64.32) | 32.28 (14.84–67.11) | 34.33 (16.4–69.85) | 32.08 (15.76–64.48) | 37.58 (20.31–70.94) | 42.95 (24.54–77.14) | 51.94 (31.52–88.39) | 45.96 (29.32–74.06) | 58.5 (38.79–89.58) | 70.68 (48.1–104.96) |
| 2012–13 | 10.96 (5.05–25.92) | 12.94 (5.51–30.84) | 13.93 (7.26–29.65) | 16.59 (9.34–32.58) | 15.3 (9.94–25.72) | 19.59 (11.17–37.81) | 21.21 (14.09–34.17) | 26.68 (18.09–41.05) | 30.86 (22.82–40.92) | 37.68 (25.53–57.45) | 42.45 (31.39–56.29) | 54.35 (40.13–72.27) |
| 2013–14 | 17.72 (7.9–37.94) | 15.64 (7.3–32.6) | 18.74 (9.82–36.49) | 21.31 (12.07–39.21) | 24.55 (14–44.98) | 19.79 (12.29–33.19) | 26.16 (17.02–41.7) | 31.41 (21.16–47.5) | 43.13 (29.18–64.84) | 33.28 (24.47–44.45) | 46.15 (33.91–61.7) | 58.33 (43.01–77.66) |
| 2015–16 | 48.3 (16.51–113.91) | 48.47 (16.56–114.58) | 50.31 (18.88–114.99) | 53.37 (21.44–118.68) | 52.91 (22.38–115.21) | 53.61 (22.69–116.66) | 56.94 (27.06–117.17) | 63.21 (32.38–124.8) | 64.18 (37.24–116.25) | 68.06 (38.78–124.43) | 73.27 (46.12–121.35) | 87.82 (57.09–139.53) |
| 2017–18 | 28.72 (10.86–68.26) | 27.17 (10.44–64.33) | 29.46 (12.91–65.93) | 32.54 (15.56–69.14) | 33.57 (17–68.92) | 31.08 (16.29–61.99) | 34.85 (20.51–63.09) | 41.42 (25.5–71.71) | 48.72 (32.39–75.87) | 48.1 (31.97–74.92) | 52.83 (38.48–70.92) | 67.61 (49.24–90.92) |
Strategies are vaccinating children 6–23 months (strategy I), 2–5 years (strategy II) and 6–14 years (strategy III) with either the Southern Hemisphere influenza vaccine (Strategy A) or Northern Hemisphere vaccine (Strategy B) or both (Strategy C: twice yearly 3-month vaccination periods, or Strategy D: year-round vaccination)
Fig. 5ICER per DALY averted and 95% CI. Results for 2014–15 and 2016–17 are not shown as there were no periods of high influenza activity detected in these years and calculation of ICER values per DALY averted would produce an infinite value as no DALYs would be averted. Similarly, ICER values are not shown for A and B strategies where vaccine administration was mistimed to influenza activity as vaccination was considered ineffective that year. Note the y-axes are cut off at 10,000 while actual values may exceed this value. Section shaded grey between the horizontal dotted lines represents outputs that fall within a willingness-to-pay threshold of 1–51% of the GDP per capita (i.e. between $17 and $872). Values below zero are cost saving. Strategies are vaccinating children 6–23 months (strategy I), 2–5 years (strategy II) and 6–14 years (strategy III) with either the Southern Hemisphere influenza vaccine (Strategy A) or Northern Hemisphere vaccine (Strategy B) or both (Strategy C: twice yearly 3-month vaccination periods, or Strategy D: year-round vaccination)
Fig. 6Cost-effectiveness acceptability curve and frontier for strategies with the highest incremental net monetary benefit. a Cost-effectiveness acceptability curve. b Cost-effectiveness acceptability frontier. NB: X axis is limited to 1000 USD per DALY averted. Strategies are vaccinating children 6–23 months (strategy I), 2–5 years (strategy II) and 6–14 years (strategy III) with either the SH influenza vaccine (Strategy A) or NH vaccine (Strategy B) or both (Strategy C: twice yearly 3-month vaccination periods, or Strategy D: year-round vaccination)
Incremental net monetary benefit values and probabilities for each vaccination strategy at a willingness-to-pay threshold of $872 per DALY averted
| Strategy | Mean INMB value in ‘000 s | INMB 95% credible interval in ‘000 s | Probability of highest INMB benefit | Rank | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lower quantile | Upper quantile | ||||
| Strategy IA | − 472 | − 6201 | 10,054 | 4% | 5 |
| Strategy IB | 3 | − 5975 | 13,302 | 3% | 1 |
| Strategy IC | − 217 | − 6976 | 13,545 | 0% | 3 |
| Strategy ID | − 3424 | −10,351 | 9188 | 0% | 8 |
| Strategy IIA | − 1293 | −14,377 | 23,996 | 11% | 7 |
| Strategy IIB | − 581 | −13,854 | 28,726 | 7% | 6 |
| Strategy IIC | − 387 | −15,597 | 31,947 | 2% | 4 |
| Strategy IID | − 7507 | −22,440 | 20,834 | 0% | 11 |
| Strategy IIIA | − 7077 | −36,674 | 53,262 | 12% | 10 |
| Strategy IIIB | − 7531 | −35,320 | 44,647 | 12% | 12 |
| Strategy IIIC | − 3633 | −39,244 | 70,255 | 14% | 9 |
| Strategy IIID | − 20,326 | −54,467 | 42,876 | 0% | 13 |
| No vaccine | 0 | – | – | 35% | 2 |
INMB incremental net monetary benefit. Strategies are vaccinating children 6–23 months (strategy I), 2–5 years (strategy II) and 6–14 years (strategy III) with either the Southern Hemisphere influenza vaccine (Strategy A) or Northern Hemisphere vaccine (Strategy B) or both (Strategy C: twice yearly 3-month vaccination periods, or Strategy D: year-round vaccination)