| Literature DB >> 35193503 |
Andrea Driscoll1,2, Lan Gao3, Jennifer J Watts3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Globally the burden of heart failure is rising. Hospitalisation is one of the main contributors to the burden of heart failure and unfortunately, the majority of heart failure patients will experience multiple hospitalisations over their lifetime. Considering the high health care cost associated with heart failure, a review of economic evaluations of post-discharge heart failure services is warranted. AIM: An integrated review of the economic evaluations of post-discharge nurse-led heart failure services for patients hospitalised with acute heart failure.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiac failure; Clinics; Cost benefit analysis; Cost-effectiveness; Economic evaluation; Heart failure; Nursing; Remote monitoring
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35193503 PMCID: PMC8862539 DOI: 10.1186/s12872-022-02509-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cardiovasc Disord ISSN: 1471-2261 Impact factor: 2.298
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram of literature review process
Summary of economic evaluations, CHEERS score and GRADE quality of evidence
| References | Participants, country and time horizon | Type of study and comparators | Inputs | Effectiveness measure | Type of economic evaluation and outcome | CHEERS quality of reporting score (13) | GRADE quality of evidence* (14) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Turner [ | 1163 patients with CHD or HF in 20 primary care practice clinics with follow-up over 12 months Country: United Kingdom | Cluster RCT Patients seen in GP practice (n = 658) versus patients seen weekly in a HF nurse clinic (n = 505) | Costs of intervention, medications, hospital appointments, travel costs and hospitalisation costs | QALYs measured by EuroQol | Cost-effectiveness HF nurse clinics were cost-effective at an ICER of £13 158 per QALY gained UK pounds | 76% | High |
| Wijeysundera [ | 16,443 patients discharged from hospital with HF with follow-up over 12 years Country: Canada | Cohort study Patients seen in a usual care clinic versus hypothetical cohort managed in a multidisciplinary HF clinic Based on two clinic visits/year | Costs of clinics from existing clinic, staffing costs and overheads, costs of diagnostic tests, medications, hospitalisations, emergency department presentations Transition probabilities from meta-analyses | Life expectancy as measured in the EFFECT study [ | Cost-effectiveness HF clinics were cost-effective with an ICER of $18,259/life-year gained Canadian dollars | 86% | Moderate |
| Craswell [ | HF patients seen in an outpatient clinic at one hospital with follow-up over 12 months Country: Australia | Pre and post design Patients seen in usual Cardiology clinic (n = 75) versus patients seen fortnightly in a NP titration clinic (n = 139) | Cost of clinic, personnel salary, and consumables from local service for NP clinic Usual Cardiology clinic costs from a national database. Includes same costs as for NP clinic but it is unclear if Cardiologist salary was included | No measure | Cost comparison Total cost per clinic visit was lower in NP titration clinic ($316) versus usual Cardiology clinic ($480) Total cost of NP titration clinic was $136 464 versus total cost of Cardiology clinic $153 456 Australian dollars | 67% | Very low |
| Blum [ | HF patients recently discharged from hospital. Modelling over a lifetime Country: USA | Meta-analysis Standard care versus disease management clinic versus home visits versus case management | Mortality and rehospitalisation modelled from a retrospective cohort of 3 million medicare pateints. Costs of hospitalisations, clinics, staffing, overheads, diagnostic tests, and medications were included. Cost of interventions were from RCTs. Transition probabilities from meta-analyses | QALYs as measured in the EPHESUS trial [ | Cost-effectiveness with decision analytic decision model Home visits were cost-effective with an ICER of $19,570 per QALY gained All 3 interventions were cost-effective at a WTP of $50,000 US dollars | 96% | High |
| Hebert [ | 406 HF patients from outpatient clinics in Harlem, NY were followed up for 12 months Country: USA | RCT 203 HF patients assigned to usual care versus 203 HF patients to nurse telephone follow-up including one clinic visit | Costs of intervention, transportation costs, cost of salaries and overheads, cost of hospitalisations, clinics and ED presentations, patient diaries determined time in medical appointments, informal carer costs | QALYs measured by EuroQol-5D | Cost-effectiveness analysis Nurse managed group was cost-effective with an ICER of $17,543 per QALY gained US dollars | 91% | High |
| Klersy [ | HF patients from the community and followed up for 12 months Country: multiple countries | Based on meta-analysis of 21 RCTs of remote monitoring versus usual care | Costs of hospitalisations | QALYs calculated as survival gain multiplied by utility gain Utilities were taken from published trials | Cost-effectiveness Cost differences between the two groups ranged from €300- €1000 favouring RPM with a QALY gain of 0.06 Euros | 91% | High |
| Boyne [ | HF patients from outpatient clinics in 3 hospitals and were followed up for 12 months Country: Netherlands | RCT Total of 382 HF patients were randomised to telemonitoring (n = 197) versus usual care (n = 185) | Cost diary provided data on home care costs, outpatient visits to various healthcare providers and GP visits. Also hospitalisations, ED presentations, and medication costs | QALYs measured by EQ-5D | Cost-effectiveness Telemonitoring was cost-effective with an ICER of €40,321 per QALY gained. However the probability of telemonitoring being cost-effective at a threshold of €50,000 was 48% Euros | 86% | High |
| Thokala [ | HF patients recently discharged from a HF hospitalisation were followed up for six months Time horizon was over 30 years Country: United Kingdom | Network meta-analysis of 21 RCTs (6317 HF patients) comparing usual care with telemonitoring structured telephone support (STS) human-to-human or STS human-to-machine | Costs of the intervention, hospitalisation, and usual care | QALYs were taken from four RCTs of the different interventions | Cost-effectiveness with Markov model Telemonitoring was cost-effective, compared to usual care, at an ICER of £11,873 per QALY gained UK pounds | 86% | High |
*GRADE of evidence [13]: high quality when further research was unlikely to change the estimate of effect; moderate quality when further research may be likely change the estimate of effect; low quality when further research is very likely to change the estimate of effect; and very low quality when there is a large degree of uncertainty about the estimate of effect