| Literature DB >> 35015207 |
Don Husereau1,2, Michael Drummond3, Federico Augustovski4,5,6, Esther de Bekker-Grob7, Andrew H Briggs8, Chris Carswell9, Lisa Caulley10,11,12, Nathorn Chaiyakunapruk13, Dan Greenberg14, Elizabeth Loder15,16, Josephine Mauskopf17, C Daniel Mullins18, Stavros Petrou19, Raoh-Fang Pwu20, Sophie Staniszewska21.
Abstract
Health economic evaluations are comparative analyses of alternative courses of action in terms of their costs and consequences. The Consolidated Health Economic Evaluation Reporting Standards (CHEERS) statement, published in 2013, was created to ensure health economic evaluations are identifiable, interpretable, and useful for decision making. It was intended as guidance to help authors report accurately which health interventions were being compared and in what context, how the evaluation was undertaken, what the findings were, and other details that may aid readers and reviewers in interpretation and use of the study. The new CHEERS 2022 statement replaces previous CHEERS reporting guidance. It reflects the need for guidance that can be more easily applied to all types of health economic evaluation, new methods and developments in the field, as well as the increased role of stakeholder involvement including patients and the public. It is also broadly applicable to any form of intervention intended to improve the health of individuals or the population, whether simple or complex, and without regard to context (such as health care, public health, education, social care, etc). This summary article presents the new CHEERS 2022 28-item checklist and recommendations for each item. The CHEERS 2022 statement is primarily intended for researchers reporting economic evaluations for peer reviewed journals as well as the peer reviewers and editors assessing them for publication. However, we anticipate familiarity with reporting requirements will be useful for analysts when planning studies. It may also be useful for health technology assessment bodies seeking guidance on reporting, as there is an increasing emphasis on transparency in decision making.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35015207 PMCID: PMC8847248 DOI: 10.1007/s40258-021-00704-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Appl Health Econ Health Policy ISSN: 1175-5652 Impact factor: 3.686
The CHEERS 2022 checklist
| Section/topic | Item No | Guidance for reporting | Reported in section |
|---|---|---|---|
| Title | |||
| Title | 1 | Identify the study as an economic evaluation and specify the interventions being compared. | – |
| Abstract | |||
| Abstract | 2 | Provide a structured summary that highlights context, key methods, results, and alternative analyses. | – |
| Introduction | |||
| Background and objectives | 3 | Give the context for the study, the study question, and its practical relevance for decision making in policy or practice. | – |
| Methods | |||
| Health economic analysis plan | 4 | Indicate whether a health economic analysis plan was developed and where available. | – |
| Study population | 5 | Describe characteristics of the study population (such as age range, demographics, socioeconomic, or clinical characteristics). | – |
| Setting and location | 6 | Provide relevant contextual information that may influence findings. | – |
| Comparators | 7 | Describe the interventions or strategies being compared and why chosen. | – |
| Perspective | 8 | State the perspective(s) adopted by the study and why chosen. | – |
| Time horizon | 9 | State the time horizon for the study and why appropriate. | – |
| Discount rate | 10 | Report the discount rate(s) and reason chosen. | – |
| Selection of outcomes | 11 | Describe what outcomes were used as the measure(s) of benefit(s) and harm(s). | – |
| Measurement of outcomes | 12 | Describe how outcomes used to capture benefit(s) and harm(s) were measured. | – |
| Valuation of outcomes | 13 | Describe the population and methods used to measure and value outcomes. | – |
| Measurement and valuation of resources and costs | 14 | Describe how costs were valued. | – |
| Currency, price date, and conversion | 15 | Report the dates of the estimated resource quantities and unit costs, plus the currency and year of conversion. | – |
| Rationale and description of model | 16 | If modelling is used, describe in detail and why used. Report if the model is publicly available and where it can be accessed. | – |
| Analytics and assumptions | 17 | Describe any methods for analysing or statistically transforming data, any extrapolation methods, and approaches for validating any model used. | – |
| Characterising heterogeneity | 18 | Describe any methods used for estimating how the results of the study vary for subgroups. | – |
| Characterising distributional effects | 19 | Describe how impacts are distributed across different individuals or adjustments made to reflect priority populations. | – |
| Characterising uncertainty | 20 | Describe methods to characterise any sources of uncertainty in the analysis. | – |
| Approach to engagement with patients and others affected by the study | 21 | Describe any approaches to engage patients or service recipients, the general public, communities, or stakeholders (such as clinicians or payers) in the design of the study. | – |
| Results | |||
| Study parameters | 22 | Report all analytic inputs (such as values, ranges, references) including uncertainty or distributional assumptions. | – |
| Summary of main results | 23 | Report the mean values for the main categories of costs and outcomes of interest and summarise them in the most appropriate overall measure. | – |
| Effect of uncertainty | 24 | Describe how uncertainty about analytic judgments, inputs, or projections affect findings. Report the effect of choice of discount rate and time horizon, if applicable. | – |
| Effect of engagement with patients and others affected by the study | 25 | Report on any difference patient/service recipient, general public, community, or stakeholder involvement made to the approach or findings of the study | – |
| Discussion | |||
| Study findings, limitations, generalisability, and current knowledge | 26 | Report key findings, limitations, ethical or equity considerations not captured, and how these could affect patients, policy, or practice. | – |
| Other relevant information | |||
| Source of funding | 27 | Describe how the study was funded and any role of the funder in the identification, design, conduct, and reporting of the analysis | – |
| Conflicts of interest | 28 | Report authors conflicts of interest according to journal or International Committee of Medical Journal Editors requirements. | – |