| Literature DB >> 34703834 |
Tetsuya Matsumoto, Oliver Darlington, Ryan Miller, Jason Gordon, Phil McEwan, Takahisa Ohashi, Amer Taie, Akira Yuasa.
Abstract
Background: Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) represents a significant global public health crisis. Despite ample availability of Gram-positive antibiotics, there is a distinct lack of agents against Gram-negative pathogens, including carbapenem-resistant Enterobacterales, which remains a real threat in Japan. The AMR Action Plans aim to mitigate the growing public health concern posed by AMR. Objective: This study aims to estimate the clinical and economic outcomes of drug-resistant Gram-negative pathogens forecasts for Japan to guide resource allocation defined within the upcoming National AMR Action Plan.Entities:
Keywords: AMR; Gram-negative; Japan; anti-microbial resistance; burden of illness; economic burden
Year: 2021 PMID: 34703834 PMCID: PMC8494726 DOI: 10.36469/001c.28327
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Health Econ Outcomes Res ISSN: 2326-697X
Targeted Populations Used To Estimate the Annual Infected Population and Corresponding Resistance Levels in Japan
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| 722 627 | 1 473 239 | 540 262 |
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| 7.75% | 8.96% | 9.52% |
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| 3.81% | 5.29% | 5.97% |
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| cUTI | 59.44 | 36.44 | 30.70 |
| cIAI | 22.83 | 31.33 | 29.64 |
| HAP/VAP | 17.73 | 32.24 | 39.66 |
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| 52.36 | 41.62 | 36.85 |
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| 25.05 | 26.09 | 26.36 |
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| 22.59 | 32.29 | 36.79 |
Abbreviations: cIAI, complicated intra-abdominal infection; cUTI, complicated urinary tract infection; HAP, hospital-acquired pneumonia; Pip/Taz, piperacillin/ tazobactam; VAP, ventilator-associated pneumonia. Antibiotic resistance rates for population A, B and C are based on the proportion of patients with infectious disease within each population.
Figure 1.Health Economic Model (treatment pathway) Structure
Abbreviations: LOS, length of stay. Infected individuals, denoted by the annual incidence of infection, enter the treatment pathway and are treated according to the pre-determined anti-infective regimen, Piperacillin/Tazobactam followed by Meropenem, until they are either cured (successful treatment/naturally resolves infection) or die (from infection or at a rate aligned to the general population). The LOS associated with a successful treatment is 7 days. In case of unsuccessful treatment, patients may receive up to two treatment lines and a rate of death associated with the modelled indications is applied. Subsequent lines of treatment are received only if a treatment is unsuccessful, and the infection is not resolved naturally. It is assumed that unsuccessful treatment will become apparent before the full course of antibiotic treatment is complete and is associated with a shorter LOS of 4 days. Patients who have exhausted all available antibiotic treatment options and fail to clear the infection naturally are assumed to die from infection 3 days after their last available treatment.
Key Inputs Used to Populate the Model
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| LOS - Successful treatment | The LOS (per-therapy line) of a patient when a line of treatment is successful (days). | 7 days | Local expert opinion |
| LOS - Unsuccessful treatment | The LOS (per-therapy line) of a patient when a line of treatment is unsuccessful (days). | 4 days | Local expert opinion |
| Additional LOS for mortality | An additional LOS associated with patients who die in hospital (days). | 3 days | Local expert opinion |
| Utility (not infected) | Health state utility for patients whose infection has been resolved. | 0.8472* | Shiroiwa et al. |
| Life expectancy post treatment success | The life expectancy of a successfully treated patient based on 65-69-year-olds in Japan.± | 22.13 years | National Institute of Population and Social Security Research |
| Mortality rate (given successful treatment) | The daily rate of mortality associated with successful treatment. | 0.0000255 | National Institute of Population and Social Security Research |
| Treatment efficacy (given no resistance) | The probability of treatment success in patients with no resistance to treatment. | 0.9 | Assumption |
| Treatment efficacy (given resistance) | The probability of treatment success in patients with resistance to treatment. | 0.03 | Assumption |
Abbreviations: LOS, length of stay. * Weighted mean (based on sex) of Japanese population norm aged ≥70 years old ± Based on the weighted mean age of the indication specific infected population from UK hospital admission data (65–68 years old) and the diagnosis breakdown in Japan for Population A, B and C (Table 1).
Additional Indication Specific Inputs
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| Utility (infected) | The health state utility of an infected cUTI patient. | 0.68 | Ernst et al. |
| Mortality rate (given unsuccessful treatment) | The daily rate of mortality associated with a failing treatment on a cUTI patient. | 0.002151* | Fukunaga et al. |
| Daily hospitalization cost | The cost associated with each day a cUTI patient spends in the general ward. | ¥28 410 (US $266) | Japan DPC code 110310xx99xx0x as of 2021 |
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| Utility (infected) | The health state utility of an infected cIAI patient. | 0.6 | Brasel et al. |
| Mortality rate (given unsuccessful treatment) | The daily rate of mortality associated with a failing treatment on a cIAI patient. | 0.011812* | Niwa et al. |
| Daily hospitalization cost | The cost associated with each day a cIAI patient spends in the general ward. | ¥30 280 (US $284) | Japan DPC code 060370xx99x0xx as of 2021 |
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| Utility (infected) | The health state utility of an infected HAP/VAP patient. | 0.58 | Beusterien et al. |
| Mortality rate (given unsuccessful treatment) | The daily rate of mortality associated with a failing treatment on a HAP/VAP patient. | 0.012080* | The JRS Guidelines for the Management of Pneumonia in Adults |
| Daily hospitalization cost | The cost associated with each day a HAP/VAP patient spends in the general ward. | ¥28 700 (US $269) | Japan DPC code 0400800399x00x as of 2021 |
Abbreviations: cIAI, complicated intra-abdominal infection; cUTI, complicated urinary tract infection; DPC, diagnosis procedure combination; HAP, hospital- acquired pneumonia; JRS, Japanese Respiratory Society; VAP, ventilator-associated pneumonia. *Published literature reporting mortality over 30-days in a Japanese setting and converted to a daily rate. For cUTI, Fukunaga et al, a study reporting 6.25% deaths among urosepsis patients over 30 days, was used. For cIAI, Niwa et al,32 a study reporting 11.4% deaths associated with bloodstream infections over 30 days and a hazard ratio of 2.92 for IAI, was used. For HAP/VAP, The JRS Guidelines for the Management of Pneumonia in Adults, a study reporting a 30-day mortality rate of 30.4% for HAP patients, was used.
Absolute and Incremental (relative to current resistance level) Outcomes Using Population A
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| Hospital LOS (days) | Absolute | 5 529 661 | 5 434 982 | 5 624 270 | 55 296 610 | 54 349 823 | 56 242 700 |
| Incremental | – | - 94 679 | 94 609 | – | - 946 787 | 946 090 | |
| Defined daily dose | Absolute | 5 474 753 | 5 395 603 | 5 551 539 | 54 747 534 | 53 956 031 | 55 515 395 |
| Incremental | – | - 79 150 | 76 786 | – | - 791 502 | 767 861 | |
| Hospitalization costs (¥, USD) | Absolute | ¥159 737 337 604 (US $1 496 018 147) | ¥157 003 266 968 (US $1 470 412 240) | ¥162 469 397 348 (US $1 521 605 220) | ¥1461 015 140 157 (US $13 683 120 020) | ¥1436 008 346 793 (US $13 448 919 193) | ¥1486 003 541 180 (US $13 917 148 595) |
| Incremental | – | -¥2 734 070 636 (US -$25 605 906) | ¥2 732 059 744 (US $25 587 073) | – | -¥25 006 793 364 (US -$234 200 828) | ¥24 988 401 024 (US $234 028 574) | |
| Life years lost* | Absolute | 328 374 | 235 507 | 434 964 | 3 003 430 | 2 154 028 | 3 978 338 |
| Incremental | – | - 92 868 | 106 590 | – | - 849 402 | 974 909 | |
| QALYs lost+ | Absolute | 281 274 | 202 544 | 371 629 | 2 572 632 | 1 852 539 | 3 399 054 |
| Incremental | – | - 78 730 | 90 355 | – | - 720 093 | 826 422 | |
Abbreviations: LOS, length of stay; QALY, quality-adjusted life-year. *Life years lost based on a life expectancy of 22.1 years after treatment prior to discounting. +QALYs lost based on a quality adjusted life expectancy of 18.7 years after treatment prior to discounting.
Absolute and Incremental (relative to current resistance level) Outcomes Using Population B
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| Hospital LOS (days) | Absolute | 11 324 310 | 11 103 308 | 11 545 088 | 113 243 101 | 111 033 078 | 115 450 885 |
| Incremental | – | - 221 002 | 220 778 | – | -2 210 023 | 2 207 784 | |
| Defined daily dose | Absolute | 11 189 782 | 11 011 342 | 11 360 556 | 111 897 822 | 110 113 416 | 113 605 562 |
| Incremental | – | - 178 441 | 170 774 | – | -1 784 406 | 1 707 739 | |
| Hospitalization costs (¥, USD) | Absolute | ¥329 406 466 854 (US $3 085 052 370) | ¥322 979 769 416 (US $3 024 863 212) | ¥335 826 656 376 (US $3 145 180 579) | ¥3 012 870 018 733 (US $28 216 998 536) | ¥2 954 089 132 565 (US $27 666 486 842) | ¥3 071 591 381 157 (US $28 766 952 762) |
| Incremental | – | -¥6 426 697 438 (US -$ 60 189 159) | ¥6 420 189 522 (US $60 128 209) | – | -¥58 780 886 168 (US -$550 511 694) | ¥58 721 362 424 (US $549 954 225) | |
| Life years lost* | Absolute | 804 542 | 550 003 | 1 103 593 | 7 358 631 | 5 030 522 | 10 093 862 |
| Incremental | – | - 254 539 | 299 051 | – | -2 328 109 | 2 735 230 | |
| QALYs lost+ | Absolute | 688 566 | 472 785 | 942 058 | 6 297 873 | 4 324 262 | 8 616 397 |
| Incremental | – | - 215 781 | 253 491 | – | -1 973 612 | 2 318 524 |
Abbreviations: LOS, length of stay; QALY, quality-adjusted life-year.
*Life years lost based on a life expectancy of 22.1 years after treatment prior to discounting.
+QALYs lost based on a quality adjusted life expectancy of 18.7 years after treatment prior to discounting.
Absolute and Incremental (relative to current resistance level) Outcomes Using Population C
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| Hospital LOS (days) | Absolute | 4 162 035 | 4 076 148 | 4 247 825 | 41 620 353 | 40 761 476 | 42 478 250 | |
| Incremental | – | - 85 888 | 85 790 | – | - 858 877 | 857 897 | ||
| Defined daily dose | Absolute | 4 109 142 | 4 040 745 | 4 174 176 | 41 091 422 | 40 407 452 | 41 741 758 | |
| Incremental | – | - 68 397 | 65 034 | – | - 683 970 | 650 336 | ||
| Hospitalization costs (¥, USD) | Absolute | ¥121 025 895 572 (US $1 133 466 594) | ¥118 529 020 062 (US $1 110 082 136) | ¥123 519 923 396 (US $1 156 824 382) | ¥1 106 946 368 542 (US $10 367 093 126) | ¥1 084 109 047 117 (US $10 153 210 462) | ¥1 129 757 644 014 (US $10 580 731 857) | |
| Incremental | – | -¥2 496 875 509 (US -$23 384 458) | ¥2 494 027 824 (US $23 357 788) | – | -¥22 837 321 425 (US $- 213 882 664) | ¥22 811 275 472 (US $213 638 731) | ||
| Life years lost* | Absolute | 316 327 | 211 724 | 440 459 | 2 893 238 | 1 936 500 | 4 028 593 | |
| Incremental | – | - 104 603 | 124 132 | – | - 956 738 | 1 135 355 | ||
| QALYs lost+ | Absolute | 270 619 | 181 945 | 375 837 | 2 475 175 | 1 664 132 | 3 437 542 | |
| Incremental | – | - 88 674 | 105 219 | – | - 811 043 | 962 366 | ||
Abbreviations: LOS, length of stay; QALY, quality-adjusted life-year. *Life years lost based on a life expectancy of 22.1 years after treatment prior to discounting. +QALYs lost based on a quality adjusted life expectancy of 18.7 years after treatment prior to discounting.
Figure 2.Effects of Varying AMR Levels on Clinical and Economic Outcomes
The effect of alternative levels of AMR on outcomes of interest is presented in Figure 2. The horizontal axis represents percentage reduction in AMR levels from 100% of the current level (corresponding to no resistance) to -100% of the current level (corresponding to doubled resistance incidence). Based on the number of infections per year over a 10-year period, reducing AMR in Japan has the potential to save 4 249 096 life years, corresponding to 3 602 311 QALYs. The maximum economic gains realized over a 10-year period from reducing AMR levels were estimated at up to 4 422 284 bed days saved, 3 645 480 DDDs avoided, ¥117.6billion saved in hospitalization costs and a NMB of up to ¥18.1 trillion.
Figure 3.One Way Sensitivity Analysis (OWSA) Varying Key Inputs by +/-20% - Population A
A OWSA varying key inputs by ±20% was conducted for incremental outcomes of hospitalization costs and QALYs lost for resistance levels reduced by 50% against current resistance levels in Population A. Treatment efficacy (given no resistance) and the infected population size (per year) were key drivers of both clinical and economic outcomes. Furthermore, LOS was a key driver of clinical outcomes and utility (not infected) and life expectancy were key drivers of economic outcomes.