| Literature DB >> 34755146 |
Yenny Guzmán Ruiz1, Andres I Vecino-Ortiz2, Nicolás Guzman-Tordecilla3,4, Rolando Enrique Peñaloza-Quintero3, Julián A Fernández-Niño4,5, Maylen Rojas-Botero4, Fernando Ruiz Gomez4, Sean D Sullivan6, Antonio J Trujillo2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: During the COVID-19 pandemic, Test-Trace-Isolate (TTI) programs have been recommended as a risk mitigation strategy. However, many governments have hesitated to implement them due to their costs. This study aims to estimate the cost-effectiveness of implementing a national TTI program to reduce the number of severe and fatal cases of COVID-19 in Colombia.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Cost-effectiveness analysis; Test-Trace-Isolate (TTI); risk assessment and mitigation
Year: 2021 PMID: 34755146 PMCID: PMC8560002 DOI: 10.1016/j.lana.2021.100109
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lancet Reg Health Am ISSN: 2667-193X
Model parameters
| Parameter | Expected value | Range for Sensitivity Analysis | Source | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lower | Upper | |||
| Colombian Population | 50,300,000 | |||
| Inverse Average Infectious Period (γ) | 0·111 | |||
| Basic Reproduction Number R0 | 1·75 | 0·530 | 2·200 | |
| Susceptible to Infected | 0·115 | 0·057 | 0·217 | |
| Infected to Asymptomatic | 0·397 | 0·041 | 0·625 | |
| Asymptomatic to Recovery | 1 | Assumed | ||
| Infected to Mild symptomatic | 0·603 | 0·375 | 0·959 | |
| Mild symptomatc to Recovery | 0·673 | 0·984 | 0·990 | |
| Mild symptomatc to Death | 0·013 | 0·010 | 0·016 | |
| Mild to Moderate symptomatic | 0·314 | 0·016 | 0·703 | |
| Moderate to Severe symptomatic | 0·115 | 0·086 | 0·531 | |
| Moderate symptomatic to Recovery | 0·735 | 0·812 | 0·887 | |
| Moderate symptomatic to Death | 0·150 | 0·113 | 0·188 | |
| Severe symptomatic to Recovery | 0·478 | 0·348 | 0·609 | |
| Severe symptomatic to Death | 0·522 | 0·391 | 0·652 | |
| Risk progression reduction with monitoring | 0·480 | 0·340 | 0·660 | |
| Mortality probability reduction with monitoring in Mild and Moderate Disease | 0·200 | 0·040 | 0·900 | |
| Mortality probability reduction with monitoring in Severe Disease | 0·592 | 0·406 | 0·862 | |
| Diagnosis test (PCR) | 40·460 | 16·184 | 58·531 | |
| Social subsidies | 55·030 | 41·270 | 68·783 | |
| Sick day | 152·630 | 114·472 | 190·787 | |
| Medication | 0·835 | 0·626 | 1·043 | |
| Primary care visit, tests, and x-ray | 46·687 | 35·015 | 58·358 | |
| Emergency care visit, tests, and x-ray | 405·515 | 304·136 | 506·894 | |
| Hospital bed | 323·565 | 242·674 | 404·457 | |
| ICU bed | 642·613 | 481·960 | 803·266 | |
| Productivity loss | 25,055 | 18,791 | 31,318 | |
| First care visit | 14·757 | 11·068 | 18·446 | |
| Diary Follow-up | 2·481 | 1·860 | 3·101 | |
| Utility of Susceptible | 0·953 | 0·018 | 1·000 | |
| Utility of Infected | 0.833 | 0·017 | 1·000 | |
| Utility of Asymptomatic | 0·833 | 0·017 | 1.000 | |
| Utility of Mild symptoms | 0·5 | 0·01 | 0·990 | |
| Utility of Moderate symptoms | 0·25 | 0·005 | 0·495 | |
| Utility of Severe symptoms | 0·05 | 0·001 | 0·099 | |
| Utility of Recover | 0·953 | 0·018 | 1·000 | |
ICU, intensive care unit
Remainder from 1.0
Figure 1Markov model Diagram. Structure of the model of COVID-19 infection and progression. Patients progressed through a modified "SIR" process (Susceptible – Infected – Recovered). There are four infection states and two outcome states shown in purple and blue, respectively
Monitoring program description
| Risk Category | Definition | Intervention | Weighting percentage |
|---|---|---|---|
| High priority | Patients with at least one high risk comorbidities, older than 60 years or men between 40-59 years old | Daily phone-based follow-up by a medical doctor plus pulse-oximeter | 0.42 |
| Medium priority | Men under 40 years old, pregnant women, or patients living in household of lower socioeconomic status | Four phone-based follow-ups made by a nursing assistant during 5, 7, 10, 14 days after the infection day | 0.11 |
| Low priority | Young (< 60 years old), healthy and non-pregnant women | No active follow-up with a call-in number in case of need | 0.47 |
| Rural area | Cases were not available for phone monitoring, and in-person follow-up was required | In person first care visit and follow-up | 0.2 |
Simulation model assumptions
| No | Assumptions |
|---|---|
| 1 | Recovered patients are immune, and reinfection is not possible |
| 2 | All individuals with moderate diseases are referred to hospitals |
| 3 | All individuals with severe diseases are referred to ICUs |
| 4 | A uniform distribution was assumed of COVID-19 outcomes, social subsidies availability, and healthcare resources across Colombia |
| 5 | The heterogeneity of lethality rates was omitted |
| 6 | The transition probabilities were constant over time |
| 7 | Recovered individuals report no long-term effects from COVID -19 |
| 8 | Monitoring effectiveness was equal to early corticosteroids treatment |
| 9 | The follow-up visits were 15 minutes |
| 10 | The first primary care visit was of 30 minutes |
| 11 | All individuals were tested with a PCR test and the average waiting time for the result was three days |
| 12 | The cohabiting contacts comply with isolation recommendation per 14 days |
| 13 | The transmission rate used did not include differences for the circulating variants of SARS-CoV-2 |
| 14 | The productivity loss was assumed to equal 100% during the symptomatic infected states |
ICU, intensive care unit; PCR, Polymerase chain Reaction
Cost-Effectiveness Analysis Comparing Monitoring to No Intervention to Address Colombian COVID-19 Pandemic.
| ECONOMIC IMPACT | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Perspective | Comparator | Δcost | Δeffectiveness | ICER | |
| ($) | (QALYs) | (Life expectancy) | ($/QALYs) | ||
| Social | Standard | ||||
| Monitoring | -1045·52 | 0·44 | 0·30 | Dominates | |
| Health Care | Standard | ||||
| Monitoring | -850·19 | 0·44 | 0·30 | Dominates | |
ICER, Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; QALY, quality-adjusted life-year
Base case population-level outcomes
| EPIDEMIOLOGIC IMPACT (Annual) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hospital Days | ICU Days | Deaths | ||||
| (N) | (Cost $ billion) | (N) | (Cost $ billion) | (N) | (Cost $ billion) | |
| Standard | 30,050,494 | 9·723 | 31,649,666 | 20·338 | 126·431 | 3.168 |
| Monitoring | 35,092,622 | 11·355 | 18,846,101 | 12·111 | 41·701 | 1.045 |
| (Δ %) | 17% | -40% | -67% | |||
| (Δ $billion) | 1·632 | -8·228 | -2.123 | |||
| Total Difference Health Care Perspective | $billion -6.596 | |||||
| Total Difference Social Perspective | $billion -8.719 | |||||
ICU, intensive care unit
Figure 2Tornado diagram. It shows the impact of the sensitivity analysis on the incremental cost per QALY gained by TTI prom compared to no intervention. RR, Relative risk; ICU, Intensive Care Unit.
Figure 3Incremental cost-effectiveness plane of 1000 Monte-Carlo Simulations.