| Literature DB >> 34210258 |
Timothy J Steiner1,2, Mattias Linde3,4,5, Petra Schnell-Inderst6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The first manuscript in this series delineated a model of structured headache services, potentially cost-effective but requiring formal cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA). We envisaged a need for a new outcome measure for this purpose, applicable to all forms of treatment, care and care-delivery systems as opposed to comparisons of single-modality treatments. CONCEPTION AND DELINEATION: A literature review confirmed the lack of any suitable established measure. We prioritised construct validity, simplicity, comprehensiveness and expression in intuitive units. We noted that pain was the key burdensome symptom of migraine and episodic tension-type headache (TTH), that pain above a certain level was disabling, that it was difficult to put economic value to pain but relatively easy to do this for time, a casualty of headache leading to lost productivity. Alleviation of pain to a non-disabling level would be expected to bring restoration of function. We therefore based the measure on time spent in the ictal state (TIS) of migraine or TTH, either as total TIS or proportion of all time. We expressed impact on health, in units of time, as TIS*DW, where DW was the disability weight for the ictal state supplied by the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) studies. If the time unit was hours, TIS*DW yielded hours lived with (or lost to) disability (HLDs), in analogy with GBD's years lived with disability (YLDs). UTILITY ASSESSMENT: Acute treatments would reduce TIS by shortening attack duration, preventative treatments by reducing attack frequency; health-care systems such as structured headache services would have these effects by delivering these treatments. These benefits were all measurable as HLDs-averted. Population-level estimates would be derived by factoring in prevalence, but also taking treatment coverage and adherence into account. For health-care systems, additional gains from provider-training (promoting adherence to guidelines and, therefore, enhancing coverage) and consumer-education (improving adherence to care plans), increasing numbers within populations gaining the benefits of treatments, would be measurable by the same metric.Entities:
Keywords: Cost-effectiveness analysis; Global Campaign against Headache; Headache disorders; Health policy; Health technology assessment; Outcome measure; Structured headache services
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34210258 PMCID: PMC8247243 DOI: 10.1186/s10194-021-01269-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Headache Pain ISSN: 1129-2369 Impact factor: 7.277
Fig. 1Figurative depiction of how the outcome measure applies to acute therapy over the course of a single migraine attack in an individual (see text for explanation)
Imaginary numerical example of acute treatment effect in a population
| Mean untreated attack duration (uD) | 12 h |
| Successfully-treated attack duration (tD) | 2 h |
| Change in mean time in ictal state (dTIS) | uD-tD = 12 − 2 = 10 h |
| Number of attacks treated (nA) | 100 |
| Probability of treatment success (SHR24) (pE) | 50 % |
| Change in total time in ictal state (dtTIS) | dTIS*nA*pE = 10*100*50 % = 500 h |
Imaginary numerical example of preventative treatment effect in an individual
| Untreated attack frequency (uF) | 60/year |
| Treated attack frequency (tF) | 30/year |
| Change in attack frequency (dF) | 30/year |
| Attack duration (D) | 14 h |
| Change in total time in ictal state (dtTIS) | dF*D = 30*14 = 420 h/year |