| Literature DB >> 34518835 |
Sigal Maya1, Guntas Padda1, Victoria Close2, Trevor Wilson3, Fareeda Ahmed4, Elliot Marseille5, James G Kahn1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Transmission of SARS-CoV-2 in health care facilities poses a challenge against pandemic control. Health care workers (HCWs) have frequent and high-risk interactions with COVID-19 patients. We undertook a cost-effectiveness analysis to determine optimal testing strategies for screening HCWs to inform strategic decision-making in health care settings.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34518835 PMCID: PMC8437316 DOI: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-887590/v1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Res Sq
Figure 1Clinical status of HCWs based on existence of respiratory symptoms at time of screening [22–24].
Base-case values and ranges for model inputs.
| Input | Base-Case Value | Range | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
|
| 98.1% | 89.9% – 99.7% | US FDA [ |
|
| 99.6% | 99.2% - 99.8% | US FDA [ |
|
| 90% | 70% - 95% | Pollock 2021 [ |
|
| 70% | 50% - 90% | Pollock 2021 [ |
|
| 99.6% | 99.6% - 100% | Pollock 2021 [ |
|
| 95% | 67% - 100% | Shen 2020 [ |
|
| 70% | 53% - 95% | Reddy 2021 [ |
|
| 99% | 60% – 100% | See |
|
| 11% | 9% - 12% | |
|
| 66% | 50% - 100% | |
|
| 62% | 44% - 82% | |
|
| |||
|
| $3,312 | $1000 - $12,000 | Rae 2020 [ |
|
| $51 | $20 - $120 | CMS 2021 [ |
|
| $42 | $20 - $120 | CMS 2021 [ |
|
| |||
|
| 89.3% | 43.6 – 97.1 % | Wölfel 2020 [ |
|
| 7.9% | 0.7 – 36.4% | |
|
| 0.0% | 0.0 – 0.8% | |
|
| |||
|
| 67.6% | 61.7 – 69.9% | Zhao 2020 [ |
|
| 19.3% | 10.4 – 22.3% | |
|
| 0.1% | 0.0 – 1% | |
|
| |||
|
| 0.002 | 0.0005 – 0.008 | California COVID-19 Dashboard [ |
|
| 0.47 | 0.43 – 0.70 | California DPH [ |
|
| 0.4 | 0.2 – 0.8 | Nishiura 2020 [ |
|
| 0.85 | 0.50 – 1.5 | CMMID 2021 [ |
|
| 85% | 50 – 100% | Hall 2021 [ |
|
| 0.078 | 0.05 – 0.21 | Avalon Health Economics 2020 [ |
Results for screening ten HCWs on day 1-7 of having symptoms.
| Option | Net Cost | ΔCosts | QALYs Lost | ΔQALYs Lost | ICER ($/QALYs) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| $4,633 | n/a | 0.09661 | n/a | n/a |
|
| $5,037 | $404 | 0.09624 | 0.00037 | $1,081,393 |
|
| $8,293 | $3,660 | 0.19313 | −0.09652 | Dominated |
|
| $64,297 | $59,664 | 1.49459 | −1.39798 | Dominated |
|
| $82,172 | $77,539 | 1.92529 | −1.82868 | Dominated |
|
| $82,497 | $77,863 | 1.92305 | −1.82644 | Dominated |
Almost all infected individuals have viable virus at this time and positive PCR test results are treated as true positives, indicating isolation. Ag, antigen; ICER, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; IgG, immunoglobulin G; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; QALY, quality-adjusted life year; Δ: difference.
Results for screening ten asymptomatic HCWs.
| Option | Net Cost | ΔCost | QALYs Lost | ΔQALYs Lost | ICER ($/QALYs) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| $86 | n/a | 0.00084 | n/a | Dominant |
|
| $104 | $18 | 0.00244 | −0.00160 | Dominated |
|
| $523 | $437 | 0.00242 | −0.00158 | Dominated |
|
| $543 | $457 | 0.00078 | 0.00006 | $7,746,741 |
|
| $704 | $618 | 0.00137 | −0.00053 | Dominated |
|
| $963 | $877 | 0.00078 | −0.00007 | $13,370,356 |
Infected individuals may or may not have viable virus and positive PCR test results are treated as true positives, indicating isolation. Ag, antigen; ICER, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; IgG, immunoglobulin G; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; QALY, quality-adjusted life year; Δ: difference.
Summary of results.
| Clinical Status | Base Case Result | Uncertainty |
|---|---|---|
|
| Only PCR, dominant | PCR testing is 74% likely to save QALYs but only 26% likely to save costs due to variations in test sensitivities. |
|
| Only PCR, $34,000/QALY gained | PCR-only is 34% likely to be dominant over Ag testing, if transmissible infection persists into second week post-symtpom onset. As this duration decreases, cost-effectiveness of PCR testing also decreases, but remains below $180,000/QALY gained with 50% likelihood. |
|
| No Test, dominant | No other testing strategy is cost-effective. The magnitude of ICERs depend on QALYs lost per infection and transmission rate of SARS-CoV-2. |
|
| Only Ag, dominant | 25% likelihood of being cost-effective (rather than dominant), depending on prevalence of transmissible infection among asymptomatic HCWs and medical costs. |
Ag, antigen; ICER, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; QALY, quality-adjusted life year.
Results for screening ten HCW on day 8-14 of having symptoms.
| Option | Net Cost | ΔCost | QALYs Lost | ΔQALYs Lost | ICER ($/QALYs) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| $353 | n/a | 0.00709 | n/a | n/a |
|
| $560 | $207 | 0.00117 | 0.00592 | $34,980 |
|
| $836 | $277 | 0.00860 | −0.00743 | Dominated |
|
| $979 | $419 | 0.00116 | 0.00001 | $34,048,150 |
|
| $981 | $421 | 0.02299 | −0.02182 | Dominated |
|
| $1,393 | $833 | 0.02279 | −0.02163 | Dominated |
Some infected individuals have viable virus at this time and positive PCR test results are treated as true positives, indicating isolation. Ag, antigen; ICER, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; IgG, immunoglobulin G; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; QALY, quality-adjusted life year; Δ: difference.
Results for screening ten HCW on day 15-39 of having symptoms.
| Option | Net Cost | ΔCost | QALYs Lost | ΔQALYs Lost | ICER ($/QALYs) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| $11 | n/a | 0.00027 | n/a | n/a |
|
| $61 | $49 | 0.00025 | 0.00001 | $3,909,046 |
|
| $431 | $420 | 0.00026 | 0.00001 | $37,917,445 |
|
| $483 | $472 | 0.00026 | 0.00001 | $42,650,284 |
|
| $522 | $511 | 0.00028 | −0.00001 | Dominated |
|
| $941 | $930 | 0.00026 | 0.00001 | $84,011,883 |
No infected individuals have viable virus at this time and positive PCR test results are treated as false positives; does not indicate isolation. Ag, antigen; iCER, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; igG, immunoglobulin G; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; QALY, quality-adjusted life year; Δ: difference.
Figure 2Probability distribution of QALYs saved with Ag vs. PCR-only testing in early clinical disease, days 1-7. PCR screening saves more QALYs than Ag testing in 74% of simulations.
Figure 3Probability distribution of difference in net costs with Ag vs. PCR-only testing in early clinical disease, days 1-7. PCR screening has fewer net costs than Ag testing in 26% of simulations.
Figure 4One-way sensitivity analyses on net costs of no test vs. Ag testing among asymptomatic HCWs. Inputs ranked by effect on output mean.