| Literature DB >> 33646528 |
M Cochrane1, E Mitchell2,3, W Hollingworth4, E Crawley4, D Trépel3,5.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Chronic fatigue syndrome/myalgic encephalomyelitis (CFS/ME) has profound quality of life and economic consequences for individuals, their family, formal services and wider society. Little is known about which therapeutic interventions are more cost-effective.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33646528 PMCID: PMC7917957 DOI: 10.1007/s40258-021-00635-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Appl Health Econ Health Policy ISSN: 1175-5652 Impact factor: 3.686
Fig. 1Study selection process. CFS chronic fatigue syndrome
Characteristics of the selected studies
| First author, year, country | Economic evaluation, (study type) | Interventions | Setting | Target population; sample size | Case definition | Baseline fatigue and utility score | Perspective; time horizon | Currency, price year | Cost categories | Outcomes measures | Funding source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chisholm (2001) [ | CEA (RCT) | COUN vs. CBT | Primary care | Age 16–75 years and fatigue ≥ 3 months; | 28% CDC criteria | CFQ: 22.4–24.2 NR | Societal; 6 months | GBP, NR | Health care costs, community-based services costs, intervention costs, costs of lost employment and informal care | CFQ | NR |
| Crawley (2018) [ | CUA (RCT) | LP + SpMC vs. SpMC | Secondary care | Age 12–18 years with mild/moderate CFS/ME; | NICE criteria | CFQ: 25.0–25.1 EQ5D: 0.31–0.34 | Health care and public sector; 12 months | GBP; 2013 | Health care costs, productivity loss of earnings, education service use (e.g. school counsellor), patient health-related travel, family costs, intervention costs | QALY (EQ5D-Y) | Charity |
| McCrone (2012) [ | CUA (RCT) | APT vs. CBT vs. GET vs. SpMC | Secondary care | Age ≥ 18 years and ≥ 6 on the CFQ; | Oxford criteria | CFQ: 27.7–28.5 EQ5D: 0.48–0.54 | Healthcare and societal; 12 months | GBP; NR | Health care costs, informal care costs, loss of productivity, intervention costs | QALY (EQ5D-3L) | Government |
| McCrone (2004) [ | CEA (RCT) | GET vs. CBT | Primary care | Age 16–75 years and fatigue ≥ 3 months; | 29% CDC criteria | CFQ: 24.7–25.3 NR | Societal; 8 months | GBP; 2001 | Health care costs, informal care costs, intervention costs | CFQ | Charity |
| Meng (2017) [ | CUA (RCT) | FSM vs. UC | Primary care | Age 18–65 years and ≥ 6 months of fatigue; | NR | FSS: 6.45–6.62 NR | Societal; 12 months | USD; 2014 | Health care costs, health services utilisation, prescription medication, productivity losses, out-of-pocket expenses, intervention costs | QALY (SF-36) | Government |
| O'Dowd (2006) [ | CCA (RCT) | CBT and GAS vs. EAS vs. SMC | Secondary care | Adults with a diagnosis of CFS/ME referred by a GP; | CDC criteria | CFQ: 23.9–25.0 HUI: 0.53–0.63 | Healthcare; 12 months | GBP; 2002 | Health care costs, medication costs, resource costs, intervention costs | HUI | Government |
| Richardson (2013) [ | CUA (RCT) | PR vs. SL vs. TAU | Primary care | Age ≥ 18 years and ≥ 4 on the Chalder fatigue score; | Oxford criteria | CFQ: 10.3–10.5 (bimodal score) EQ5D: 0.42–0.45 (approximately) | Healthcare; 70 weeks | GBP; 2009 | Health care costs, intervention costs (descriptive analysis: informal care costs, loss of productivity, private expenditures) | QALY (EQ5D-3L) | Government |
| Sabes-Figuera (2012) [ | CEA (RCT) | GET vs. COUN vs. BUC | Primary care | Age 18–75 years and fatigue ≥ 3 months; | NR | CFQ: 23.4–24.8 EQ5D: 0.64 | Healthcare; 6 months | GBP; 2009 | Health care costs, social care costs, medication costs, intervention costs | CFQ | Charity |
| Severens (2004) [ | CUA, CEA (RCT) | CBT vs. NC vs. SG | Secondary care | Age 18–60 years and CIS fatigue score ≤ 36; | CDC criteria (with one exception) | CIS: 51.9–52.3 EQ5D: 0.49–0.53 | Healthcare and societal; 14 months | EUR; 1998 | Health care costs, informal and formal home care support costs, productivity loss, intervention costs | CIS QALYs (EQ5D-3L) | Healthcare insurance board |
| Vos-Vromans (2017) [ | CEA, CUA (RCT) | CBT vs. MRT | Secondary care | Age 18–60 years and ≥ 40 on the CIS fatigue subscale; | CDC criteria | CIS: 51.1–51.5 EQ5D: 0.48–0.56 | Societal; 52 weeks | EUR; 2011 | Health care costs, patient and family costs, costs from productivity losses, intervention costs | CIS QALY (EQ5D-3L) | Multiple |
APT adaptive pacing therapy, BUC usual care plus self-help booklet, CBT cognitive behavioural therapy, CCA cost-consequence analysis, CDC Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, CEA cost-effectiveness analysis, CFS chronic fatigue syndrome, CFQ Chalder Fatigue Questionnaire score, CIS Checklist Individual Strength fatigue subscale, COUN counselling, CUA cost-utility analysis, EAS, education and support group, EQ5D EuroQol 5 dimensions, EQ5D-3L EQ5D using three levels quality-of-life questionnaire, EQ5D-Y EQ5D for children and adolescents, EUR Euro, FSM fatigue self-management, FSS Fatigue Severity Scale, GAS graded activity scheduling, GBP British Pound Sterling, GET graded exercise therapy, GP general practitioner, HUI Health Utility Index, LP lightning process, ME myalgic encephalomyelitis, MRT multidisciplinary rehabilitation treatment, NC natural course, NICE National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, NR not reported, PR pragmatic rehabilitation, QALY quality-adjusted life-year, RCT randomised controlled trial, SF-36 Short-Form 36 General Health Questionnaire, SG guided support groups, SL supportive listening, SMC standard medical care, SpMC specialist medical care, TAU treatment as usual, UC usual care, USD US dollars
Cognitive behavioural therapy in adults
| First author, year | Intervention | Mean costs (95% CI)/[SD] | Mean outcomes (95% CI)/[SD] | Incremental cost (95% CI)/[SD] | Incremental effect (95% CI)/[SD] | Incremental cost-effectiveness of CBT vs. comparator (unless otherwise stated) | CEAC | CEP |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chisholm, 2001 [ | CBT ( | £4 (− £928 to £822)a | − 7.34 (5.5–9.1)a | NA | NA | NA | N | N |
| COUN ( | − £176 (− £793 to £410)a | − 8.25 (6.5–10.0)a | − £180 (− £1,103 to £968)a | 0.90 (− 1.80 to 3.60)a | Counselling dominates CBT | |||
| McCrone, 2012 [ | CBT ( | £20,288 [£14,363] | 0.60 [0.21] | NA | NA | CBT: 59.5%c | Y | N |
| SpMC ( | £22,088 [£17,438] | 0.52 [0.25] | − £698b | 0.0492 | SMC: 5.5%c | |||
| APT ( | £20,935 [£15,531] | 0.53 [0.22] | NR | NR | APT: 0.2%c | |||
| GET ( | £23,317 [£17,284] | 0.57 [0.23] | NR | NR | GET: 34.8%c | |||
| McCrone, 2004 [ | CBT ( | £1970 [£2895] | NR | NA | NA | NA | Y | N |
| GET ( | £1684 [£2584] | NR | £193 (− £458 to £946)d | 0.71 | NR | |||
| O’Dowd, 2006 [ | CBT ( | £699.49 [£480.59]e | 0.047 [0.120]a | NA | NA | NA | N | N |
| EAS ( | £809.77 [£656.87]e | 0.075 [0.157]a | − £110.28 [£0.366] | − 0.028 [0.363] | NR | |||
| SMC ( | £451.57 [585.73]e | 0.021 [0.214]a | £247.93 [£0.032] | 0.026 [0.511] | NR | |||
| Severens, 2004 [ | CBT ( | NR | 0.0737 QALYsa | NA | NA | NA | Y | Y |
| NC ( | NR | 0.0458 QALYsa | NR | NR | €21,375 per QALY | |||
| SG ( | NR | − 0.0018 QALYsa | NR | NR | CBT dominates SG | |||
| Vos-Vromans, 2017 [ | CBT ( | €8846 | 0.60 | NA | NA | CBT: 95%c | Y | Y |
| MRT ( | €14,308 | 0.65 | €5389 (€2488– €8091) | 0.05 | MRT: 5%c €118,074 per QALY (MRT vs. CBT) |
APT adaptive pacing therapy, CBT cognitive behavioural therapy, CI confidence interval, COUN counselling, EAS education and support group, GET graded exercise therapy, MRT multidisciplinary rehabilitation treatment, N no, NA not applicable, NC natural course, NR not reported, QALYs quality-adjusted life-years, SD standard deviation, SG guided support groups, SMC standard medical care, SpMC specialist medical care, Y yes, CEAC cost-effectiveness acceptability curve, CEP cost-effectiveness plane
aChange in effect/costs from baseline to follow-up
bNo CIs reported
cLikelihood of being the most cost-effective option from a societal perspective
dThis study reports incremental costs adjusted for baseline imbalances with 90% CIs
eHealthcare perspective only
Additional interventions for adults
| First author, year | Intervention | Mean costs (95% CI)/[SD] | Mean outcomes (95% CI)/[SD] | Incremental cost (95% CI)/[SD] | Incremental effect (95% CI)/[SD] | Incremental cost-effectiveness of intervention vs. TAU or BUC | CEAC | CEP |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Meng, 2017 [ | FSM ( | − $864a | NR | − $64 (− $206 to $77)a | 0.014 QALYs (− 0.008 to 0.036)a | FSM dominant | Y | Y |
| TAU ( | − $569a | NR | NA | NA | NA | |||
| Richardson, 2013 [ | PR ( | NR | NR | £218 (− £474 to £911) | − 0.012 QALYs (− 0.088 to 0.065) | TAU dominates PR | Y | N |
| SL ( | NR | NR | £460 (− £250 to £1169) | − 0.042 QALYs (− 0.122 to 0.038) | TAU dominates SL | |||
| TAU ( | NR | NR | NA | NA | NA | |||
| Sabes-Figuera 2012, [ | GET ( | £474b | 10.06 CFSa | £261 (£141 to £382) | 1.1 CFS (− 2.3 to 4.4)a | £987 per clinically significant improvement in CFS | Y | N |
| COUN ( | £651b | 8.62 CFSa | £423 (£288 to £559) | − 0.1 CFS (− 3.1 to 2.9)a | BUC dominates COU | |||
| BUC ( | £213b | 8.56 CFSa | NA | NA | NA |
BUC usual care plus self-help booklet, COUN counselling, CFS chronic fatigue syndrome, CI confidence interval, FSM fatigue self-management, GET graded exercise therapy, N no, NA not applicable, NR not reported, PR pragmatic rehabilitation, QALYs quality-adjusted life-years, SD standard deviation, SL supportive listening, TAU treatment as usual, Y yes, CEAC cost-effectiveness acceptability curve, CEP cost-effectiveness plane
aChange in effect/costs from baseline to follow-up
bHealthcare perspective only
Interventions for young people (12- to 18-year-olds)
| First author, year | Intervention | Mean costs (95% CI)/[SD] | Mean outcomes (95% CI)/[SD] | Incremental cost (95% CI)/[SD] | Incremental effect (95% CI)/[SD] | Incremental cost-effectiveness | CEAC | CEP |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Crawley, 2018 [ | LP and SpMC ( | £2002 [£67]a | 0.628 QALYs [0.021] | £390 (£189–£591) | 0.095 QALYs (0.030–0.160) | £1508 (£148–£2869) iNMB | Y | N |
| SpMC ( | £1612 [£84]a | 0.533 QALYs [0.025] | NA | NA | NA |
CI confidence interval, iNMB incremental net monetary benefit, N no, NA not applicable, LP lightning process, QALYs quality-adjusted life-year, SD standard deviation, SpMC specialist medical care, Y yes, CEAC cost-effectiveness acceptability curve, CEP cost-effectiveness plane
aHealth care and public sector perspective
| Cognitive behavioural therapy appears to represent good value for money for treating adults affected by chronic fatigue syndrome/myalgic encephalomyelitis (CFS/ME). |
| Evidence on the cost-effectiveness of treatments for young people with CFS/ME is scarce. |
| Productivity losses and informal care costs are substantial and should be included in future analyses. |