| Literature DB >> 33200169 |
Krishna P Reddy1,2,3, Claudia M Denkinger4, Tobias Broger4, Nicole C McCann1, Ankur Gupta-Wright5,6,7, Andrew D Kerkhoff8, Pamela P Pei1, Fatma M Shebl1,3, Katherine L Fielding9,10, Mark P Nicol11, C Robert Horsburgh12,13, Graeme Meintjes14,15, Kenneth A Freedberg1,3,16,17,18, Robin Wood19, Rochelle P Walensky1,3,17.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A novel urine lipoarabinomannan assay (FujiLAM) has higher sensitivity and higher cost than the first-generation AlereLAM assay. We evaluated the cost-effectiveness of FujiLAM for tuberculosis testing among hospitalized people with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), irrespective of symptoms.Entities:
Keywords: HIV; cost-effectiveness; diagnosis; lipoarabinomannan; tuberculosis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33200169 PMCID: PMC8492225 DOI: 10.1093/cid/ciaa1698
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Infect Dis ISSN: 1058-4838 Impact factor: 9.079
Model Input Parameters
| South Africa | Malawi | Deterministic Sensitivity Analysis Range | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cohort characteristics | ||||
| Age, median [IQR], years | 37 [30–46] | 38 [32–47] | … | [ |
| Men/women, % | 50/50 | 37/63 | … | [ |
| CD4 count at admission, median [IQR], cells/µL | 236 [70–445] | 219 [86–431] | … | [ |
| TB prevalence,a % | 29 | 24 | 15–45b | [ |
| MDR-TB prevalence among those with TB, % | 3 | 1 | 1–7 (South Africa); 0.5–5 (Malawi) | [ |
| Patients able to provide sputum, % | 50 | 50 | 30–90b | Assumption [ |
| Probability of empiric treatment, | 11 | 11 | 0–20b | [ |
| Probability of empiric treatment, | 10 | 10 | 0–20b | [ |
| Loss to follow-up from TB care after hospital discharge, %/month | 3.6 | 3.6 | 50–200% of base case valueb | [ |
| Mortality | ||||
| Death from untreated TB, monthly probability | 0.086 | 0.086 | 25–200% of base case valueb | [ |
| Death from AIDS (besides TB), CD4-dependent, monthly probability | 6.2 × 10–5–0.2 | 6.2 × 10–5–0.2 | … | [ |
| Cost of treatmentd | ||||
| DS-TB treatment cost, monthly (6-month duration), USD | $7 | $7 | … | [ |
| MDR-TB treatment cost, monthly (24-month duration), USD | $231 | $231 | … | [ |
| First-line ART costs (TDF/3TC/EFV), monthly, USD | $11 | $11 | 50–75% of base case value | [ |
| Cost of TB diagnostic assay, per-test (USD) | ||||
| Sputum Xperte | $15 | $25 | … | [ |
| Urine AlereLAM | $3 | $3 | … | [ |
| Urine FujiLAM | $6 | $6 | $3–20 | Estimate |
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| Performance characteristics of diagnostic assays and strategies | ||||
| Diagnostic assayf | ||||
| Sputum Xpert, CD4 <200/≥200 cells/µL | 65%/65% | 98%/98% | … | [ |
| Urine AlereLAM CD4 <200/≥200 cells/µL | 48%/2% | 97%/99% | … | [ |
| Urine FujiLAM, CD4 <200/≥200 cells/µL | 62%/23% | 94%/98% | Sensitivity: 48%/8% to 77%/38%; specificity: 75–90% | [ |
| Xpert Ultra, CD4 <200/≥200 cells/µL | 77%/77% | 96%/96% | … | [ |
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| Diagnostic strategyf | ||||
| | 33%/33% | … | [ | |
| | 62%/35% | −20% to +20% of base case value | [ | |
| | 70%/47% | −20% to +20% of base case value | [ |
Abbreviations: ART, antiretroviral therapy; DS, drug-susceptible; EFV, efavirenz; HIV, human immunodeficiency virus; IQR, interquartile range; LAM, lipoarabinomannan; MDR, multidrug-resistant; TB, tuberculosis; TDF, tenofovir; USD, 2017 US dollars; 3TC, lamivudine.
aTB prevalence is the true prevalence among the simulated group of hospitalized patients with HIV.
bThese parameters were also examined in probabilistic sensitivity analysis using beta distributions (Supplementary Text).
cThose who were diagnosed clinically without microbiologic confirmation were empirically treated in the first month of model simulation.
dWe assumed that costs of TB drugs and ART drugs were equal across countries because they are imported across countries. Costs shown here are for drugs only.
eXpert cost in a Malawi-specific costing study was higher than the cost reported in South African studies and by the South Africa National Health Laboratory Service [19]. This is due to factors such as different costs of maintenance and repair and different economies of scale.
fThe indicated sensitivity of each assay is the sensitivity among those who provided a specimen and is independent of other test results. Italics reflect a diagnostic strategy rather than a single test. The diagnostic strategy yields applied in the model accounted for nonprovision of sputum specimens and for concordance between test results—eg, adding FujiLAM would increase diagnostic yield only if FujiLAM detected additional TB cases not detected by Xpert. In multitest strategies, we applied the lowest specificity of any individual test.
Base Case Model Clinical, Cost, and Cost-Effectiveness Results
| Testing Strategy | Mortality at 2 Years, % | Life-years, Discounteda (Undiscounted) | Cost, USD, Discounteda,b | ICER, USD/YLSc |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| South Africa | ||||
| | 35.8 | 8.9 (13.2) | 8230 | … |
| | 33.3 | 9.2 (13.7) | 8500 | Dominatedd |
| | 32.1 | 9.4 (13.9) | 8640 | 830 |
| Malawi | ||||
| | 38.9 | 8.5 (12.7) | 3540 | … |
| | 37.2 | 8.8 (13.1) | 3640 | Dominatedd |
| | 36.2 | 8.9 (13.3) | 3710 | 440 |
Abbreviations: ICER, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; LAM, lipoarabinomannan; USD, 2017 US dollars; YLS, year-of-life saved.
aDiscounted 3% per year [39].
bThis reflects lifetime healthcare costs.
cThe ICER is the difference between 2 strategies in discounted costs divided by the difference in discounted life-years. The displayed life-years and costs are rounded, but the ICER was calculated using nonrounded life-years and costs. We considered a strategy cost-effective if its ICER was less than USD 940/YLS in South Africa and less than USD 750/YLS in Malawi (the ICERs of second-line antiretroviral therapy in these countries).
dThis indicates “weak dominance” [40]. The ICER of Xpert+AlereLAM versus Xpert was higher (less attractive) than the ICER of Xpert+FujiLAM versus Xpert+AlereLAM, indicating an inefficient use of resources.
Figure 1.Two-way sensitivity analysis of FujiLAM sensitivity and cost. We varied FujiLAM sensitivity and FujiLAM per-test cost across ranges and compared the cost-effectiveness of Xpert, Xpert+AlereLAM, and Xpert+FujiLAM. The displayed sensitivities are weighted averages of the sensitivities among those with a CD4 count <200 cells/µL and ≥200 cells/µL. The numbers in parentheses show the difference in sensitivity between FujiLAM and AlereLAM. In the blue areas, Xpert+FujiLAM is cost-effective compared with both Xpert and Xpert+AlereLAM; it weakly dominates Xpert+AlereLAM, meaning that it is more effective and has a lower cost-effectiveness ratio than Xpert+AlereLAM. In the red hatched areas, Xpert+FujiLAM is not cost-effective compared with Xpert, but Xpert+AlereLAM is cost-effective compared with Xpert. In the base case in both countries, FujiLAM is 15% more sensitive than AlereLAM and costs USD 3 more per test. Abbreviations: LAM, lipoarabinomannan; USD, 2017 US dollars.
Figure 2.Cost-effectiveness frontier of alternative tuberculosis testing strategies in hospitalized people with HIV. We projected the life-years and lifetime costs associated with solo (green), parallel (orange), sequential (blue), and CD4-stratified (purple) tuberculosis testing strategies in South Africa (A) and Malawi (B). Squares represent a strategy of Xpert alone, triangles represent strategies that include AlereLAM, and circles represent strategies that include FujiLAM. The testing strategies labelled on the cost-effectiveness frontier line are those that were not dominated. Other strategies, represented by symbols below the line, were dominated, reflecting an inefficient use of resources. Abbreviations: HIV, human immunodeficiency virus; LAM, lipoarabinomannan; USD, 2017 US dollars.
Figure 3.Budget impact analysis at 5-year horizon: implementing FujiLAM testing countrywide in South Africa (A) and Malawi (B) among hospitalized patients with HIV. The vertical axis range is different between panel A and panel B. Budgetary projections are for the estimated 500 000 people with HIV who would be hospitalized each year in South Africa and 70 000 people with HIV who would be hospitalized each year in Malawi, all of whom would undergo tuberculosis testing. Within each panel, the left bar represents 5-year cumulative healthcare costs among these people if Xpert was the tuberculosis testing strategy. The middle bar reflects the Xpert+FujiLAM testing strategy, with FujiLAM costing USD 6 per test. The right bar reflects the Xpert+FujiLAM testing strategy, with FujiLAM costing USD 20 per test. Abbreviations: ART, antiretroviral therapy; HIV, human immunodeficiency virus; LAM, lipoarabinomannan; USD, 2017 US dollars.