| Literature DB >> 34655364 |
Dan Cai1, Si Shi1, Shan Jiang2, Lei Si3,4, Jing Wu5, Yawen Jiang6.
Abstract
Cost-effective threshold (CET) is essential for health technology assessment and decision-making based on health economic evaluations. Recently, it has been argued that the commonly used once and three times of gross domestic product (GDP) per capita CETs of a quality-adjusted life year (QALY) are not necessarily empirically supported in all countries. Therefore, we aimed to estimate the CET of a QALY as times of GDP per capita in China, of which the reimbursement coverage decisions are increasingly engaging economic evaluations. Estimates on the value of statistical life (VSL) in China were identified from several studies in the literature and converted to times of GDP per capita, the weighted average of which was used for subsequent calculation. By pooling data on population mortality, health utility, and age distribution, we estimated the value of a statistical QALY (VSQ) from VSL using an established mathematical process, which represented the theoretical upper bound of CET. The corresponding point estimate and theoretical lower bound were obtained using their numerical relationships with the upper bound. Scenarios analyses were also conducted. The estimated CET, its upper bound, and its lower bound were 1.45, 2.90, and 1.16 times of GDP per capita in China, respectively. In different scenarios, the estimated CET varied but was greater than once GDP per capita in most cases. As such, the CET of a QALY in China is close to 1.5 times of GDP per capita, which should be benchmarked for future ICER-based coverage decisions.Entities:
Keywords: China; I18; QALY; Threshold; Willingness-to-pay
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34655364 PMCID: PMC9135816 DOI: 10.1007/s10198-021-01384-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Health Econ ISSN: 1618-7598
Included VSL studies in China
| Author (year) [references] | Survey location | Survey year | Subgroup | Sample | VSL in survey year (CNY) | Local GDP per capita in survey year (CNY) | VSL/GDP per capita |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yang et al. (2016) [ | Nanjing, China | 2014–2015 | Motorists | 1602 | ¥3,729,493 | ¥107,545b | 32.85 |
| Non-motorists | 1255 | ¥3,281,283 | |||||
| Hammitt and Geng (2019) [ | Chengdu, China | 2016 | NA | 1051 | ¥3,852,800 | ¥76,960 | 50.06 |
| Jin et al. (2018) [ | Beijing, China | 2016 | NA | 1107 | ¥5,540,000 | ¥124,516 | 44.49 |
| Hao et al. (2019) [ | 74 major Chinese cities | 2016 | NA | 308 | ¥1,530,000 | ¥49,178 | 31.11 |
| Zheng et al. (2019) [ | Hangzhou, China | 2017 | Drivers | 692 | ¥3,870,402 | ¥135,113 | 27.26 |
| Non-drivers | 400 | ¥3,359,281 |
NA not available
aIn these two studies, the weighted average VSL of subgroups were used
bThe GDP per capita of Nanjing in 2014 was used
Fig. 1The identification and screening process of value of statistical life studies in China
Estimates of CET as times of GDP per capita in the base case and using alternative VSL estimates
| VSL scenario [references] | VSQ as times of GDP per capital | 95% CI |
|---|---|---|
| Base case | 1.45 | 1.36–1.55 |
| Yang et al. (2016) [ | 1.30 | 1.26–1.35 |
| Hammitt and Geng (2019) [ | 1.98 | 1.58–2.37 |
| Jin et al. (2018) [ | 1.76 | 1.40–2.14 |
| Hao et al. (2019) [ | 1.23 | 1.00–1.50 |
| Zheng et al. (2019) [ | 1.08 | 1.04–1.12 |
CI confidence interval
CET estimates using alternative discount rates
| Discount rate | VSQ as times of GDP per capita | LB & UB |
|---|---|---|
| 5% (Base case) | 1.45 | 1.16–2.90 |
| 3% | 1.15 | 0.92–2.30 |
| 8% | 1.93 | 1.54–3.86 |
CET estimates using alternative utility sources
| Scenario | Utility estimate | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Base casea | Alternative set 1b | Alternative set 2c | |
| Base case | 1.45 | 1.25 | 1.20 |
| − 10% utility | 1.61 | 1.39 | 1.34 |
| + 10% utility* | 1.33 | 1.16 | 1.14 |
*The maximum utility value was limited to 1
aBase on data from the National Health Services Survey 2008 [28]
bBase on data from Si, Lei et al. [32]
cBased on EuroQol study [43]