| Literature DB >> 35333347 |
Audrey C Bangs1, Paul Gastañaduy2, Anne M Neilan1,3,4,5, Amy Parker Fiebelkorn6, Allison Taylor Walker7, Sowmya R Rao8,9, Edward T Ryan3,5,10,11, Regina C LaRocque3,5,11, Rochelle P Walensky1,3,5, Emily P Hyle1,3,5,11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pediatric international travelers account for nearly half of measles importations in the United States. Over one third of pediatric international travelers depart the United States without the recommended measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccinations: 2 doses for travelers ≥12 months and 1 dose for travelers 6 to <12 months.Entities:
Keywords: MMR; cost-effectiveness; measles; pediatrics; travel medicine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35333347 PMCID: PMC9214784 DOI: 10.1093/jpids/piac011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pediatric Infect Dis Soc ISSN: 2048-7193 Impact factor: 5.235
Base Case Input Parameters for a Decision Tree Model Assessing the Clinical Impact and Cost-Effectiveness of MMR Vaccination during a Pretravel Health Encounter for Infant and Preschool-Aged Travelers
| Variable | Base Case | Source | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Demographics | Infants | Preschool-aged | GTEN [ |
| Median age (IQR) | 10 mo (8-10 mo) | 3 yr (2-4 yr) | |
| Female (%) | 52 | 48 | |
| Baseline MMR vaccination status (% of travelers) | GTEN [ | ||
| Two MMR vaccinations | 0 | 40 | |
| One MMR vaccination | 8 | 52 | |
| Zero MMR vaccinations | 92 | 8 | |
|
| See | ||
| All pediatric travelers | |||
| All international travel | 30 | ||
| Travel to the Americas | 2 | ||
| Overseas travel | 93 | ||
| By continent | |||
| Travel to North America | 2 | ||
| Travel to South America | 3 | ||
| Travel to Europe | 46 | ||
| Travel to Africa | 145 | ||
| Travel to Asia | 151 | ||
| Risk of measles infection, if exposed (%) | Infants | Preschool-aged | CDC, ACIP [ |
| Two MMR vaccinations | — | 3 | |
| One MMR vaccination | 15 | 7 | |
| Zero MMR vaccinations | 90 | 90 | |
| US-acquired cases, if infected (n) | All pediatric travelers | CDC [Unpublished data] | |
| Two MMR vaccinations | 0 | ||
| One MMR vaccination | 4 | ||
| Zero MMR vaccinations | 4 | ||
| Contacts, if infected (n) | 1500 | Ortega-Sanchez et al [ | |
| QALYs lost per nonfatal measles infection | 0.019 | Thorrington et al [ | |
| Probability of death, if infected | Perry and Halsey [ | ||
| <5 yr | 0.0034 | ||
| 5-9 yr | 0.0014 | ||
| 10-19 yr | 0.0001 | ||
| 20-29 yr | 0.0028 | ||
| >30 yr | 0.0066 | ||
|
| See | ||
| Per imported measles case | $13 900 | See | |
| Per US-acquired measles case | $5600 | See | |
| Per contact, public health tracing | $330 | Ortega-Sanchez et al [ | |
| Per contact, missed work | $240 | See | |
|
| Infants | Preschool-aged | See |
| Probability of MMR vaccination (%) | 57 | 44 | GTEN [ |
| Cost of PHE | $8.30 | $8.30 | See |
| Cost of vaccination (USD) | $96 | N/A | CMS, CDC [ |
All costs are reported in 2018 USD.
Abbreviations: ACIP, Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices; MMR, measles-mumps-rubella; IQR, interquartile range; mo, months; yr, years; GTEN, Global TravEpiNet; NTTO, National Travel and Tourism Office; CDC, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; CMS, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services; USD, US dollars; QALY, quality-adjusted life year; PHE, pretravel health encounter.
Travel to the Americas includes North and South America, while overseas travel includes travel to Africa, Asia, and Europe and excludes travel in the Americas.
Costs of measles infection include direct costs of medical care and indirect cost associated with missing lost wages due to missed work for guardians.
Assumes 8 h of missed work per contact, assuming some contacts have evidence of previous vaccination, while other susceptible contacts may be recommended to quarantine or pursue post-exposure prophylaxis (see Supplementary Methods).
Visit cost is pro-rated 3% for time during PHE spent on evaluation of measles immunity and recommendation regarding MMR vaccination.
Base Case Results for a Decision Tree Model Assessing the Clinical Impact and Cost-Effectiveness of MMR Vaccination During a Pretravel Health Encounter for Infant and Preschool-Aged Travelers, Per Million US Travelers
| Imported Measles Cases | US-Acquired Measles Cases | Averted Measles Cases | QALYs | QALYs | Cost | ICER | ICER | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Infant travelers | ||||||||
| Any international travel (Riskexposure 30 exposures/1M travelers) | ||||||||
| No PHE | 25 | 99 | 22 127 000 | |||||
| PHE | 13 | 54 | 57 | 12 | 5 | 69 585 000 | 831 000 | 9.2M |
| Overseas | ||||||||
| No PHE | 78 | 313 | 69 595 000 | |||||
| PHE | 42 | 169 | 180 | 38 | 16 | 95 222 000 | 143 000 | 1.6M |
| Europe (Riskexposure 46 exposures/1M travelers) | ||||||||
| No PHE | 38 | 153 | 34 162 000 | |||||
| PHE | 21 | 83 | 88 | 19 | 8 | 76 085 000 | 475 000 | 5.3M |
| Africa (Riskexposure 145 exposures/1M travelers) | ||||||||
| No PHE | 122 | 487 | 108 392 000 | |||||
| PHE | 66 | 263 | 280 | 60 | 25 | 116 176 000 | 28 000 | 309 000 |
| Asia (Riskexposure 151 exposures/1M travelers) | ||||||||
| No PHE | 127 | 507 | 112 878 000 | |||||
| PHE | 68 | 274 | 291 | 62 | 26 | 118 598 000 | 20 000 | 218 000 |
| Preschool-aged travelers | ||||||||
| Any international travel (Riskexposure 30 exposures/1M travelers) | ||||||||
| No PHE | 4 | 13 | 3 233 000 | |||||
| PHE | 2 | 7 | 7 | 2 | 1 | 12 537 000 | 1.3M | 15.0M |
| Overseas | ||||||||
| No PHE | 11 | 41 | 10 169 000 | |||||
| PHE | 8 | 23 | 22 | 5 | 2 | 17 149 000 | 317 000 | 3.6M |
| Europe (Riskexposure 46 exposures/1M travelers) | ||||||||
| No PHE | 6 | 20 | 4 992 000 | |||||
| PHE | 4 | 11 | 11 | 2 | 1 | 13 707 000 | 807 000 | 9.1M |
| Africa (Riskexposure 145 exposures/1M travelers) | ||||||||
| No PHE | 18 | 64 | 15 838 000 | |||||
| PHE | 12 | 36 | 34 | 7 | 3 | 20 919 000 | 148 000 | 1.7M |
| Asia (Riskexposure 151 exposures/1M travelers) | ||||||||
| No PHE | 19 | 67 | 16 493 000 | |||||
| PHE | 12 | 38 | 36 | 8 | 3 | 21 354 000 | 136 000 | 1.5M |
Abbreviations: QALY, quality-adjusted life years; ICER, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; USD, US dollars; Riskexposure, risk of exposure to measles virus; PHE, pretravel health encounter; M, million; MMR, measles-mumps-rubella.
QALYs and costs are discounted at 3%; ICERs are calculated with discounted results. Costs and ICERs are rounded to the nearest 1000.
Overseas includes all international destinations outside of North and South America.
Figure 1.A 2-way sensitivity analysis depicts the value of PHE compared with no PHE when the risk of measles exposure and the number of US-acquired cases per imported measles case are varied simultaneously for infant travelers (A) and preschool-aged travelers (B). The 2 parameters examined in 2-way sensitivity analyses are the number of US-acquired cases per imported measles case (horizontal axis) and the risk of exposure to measles during travel (vertical axis). Dark green marks when PHE is both clinically and economically preferred to no PHE (cost-saving); light green marks the values at which the ICER of PHE compared with no PHE is ≤$50 000/QALY; yellow marks the values at which the ICER is >$50 000/QALY but ≤$100 000/QALY; orange marks the values at which the ICER is >$100 000/QALY but ≤$200 000/QALY. ICERs above the threshold of $200 000/QALY are shown in red. Horizontal lines represent the risk of measles exposure associated with travel to different international destinations. The base case (all pediatric international travelers) combination of 30 exposures/million travelers and 4 US-acquired cases per imported measles case is marked with an X. Abbreviations: PHE, pretravel health encounter; ICER, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; QALY, quality-adjusted life year; MMR, measles-mumps-rubella.
Figure 2.A 2-way sensitivity analysis depicts the value of PHE compared with no PHE for infant travelers when the risk of measles exposure and PHE direct costs (A) and indirect costs associated with missed work (B) are varied simultaneously. In this 2-way sensitivity analysis, the percent of base case costs is shown on the horizontal axis and the risk of exposure to measles during travel is shown on the vertical axis. Dark green marks when PHE is both clinically and economically preferred to no PHE (cost-saving); light green marks the values at which the ICER of PHE compared with no PHE is ≤$50 000/QALY; yellow marks the values at which the ICER is >$50 000/QALY but ≤$100 000/QALY; orange marks the values at which the ICER is >$100 000/QALY but ≤$200 000/QALY. ICERs above the threshold of $200 000/QALY are shown in red. Horizontal lines represent the risk of measles exposure associated with travel to different international destinations. The base case (all pediatric international travelers) combination of 30 exposures/million travelers and 100% of PHE direct costs is marked with an X. Abbreviations: PHE, pretravel health encounter; ICER, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; QALY, quality-adjusted life year; MMR, measles-mumps-rubella.
Figure 3.Scenario analysis depicting the value of PHE compared with no PHE when pediatric travelers return from international travel to communities with low MMR vaccination coverage. Communities with low MMR vaccination coverage are vulnerable to outbreaks due to a measles importation, represented by more US-acquired cases (horizontal axis) and additional contacts (vertical axis). The value of PHE is plotted as the ICER resulting from each combination of these 2 parameters. Dark green marks when PHE is both clinically and economically preferred to no PHE (cost-saving); light green marks the values at which the ICER of PHE compared with no PHE is ≤$50 000/QALY; yellow marks the values at which the ICER is >$50 000/QALY but ≤$100 000/QALY; orange marks the values at which the ICER is >$100 000/QALY but ≤$200 000/QALY. ICERs above the threshold of $200 000/QALY are shown in red. The different panels depict the scenario analysis for infants travelers returning from Europe (A) or Asia (B) and preschool-aged travelers returning from Europe (C) or Asia (D). In each panel, the base case is denoted by an X (4 US-acquired cases per imported measles case and 1500 contacts); the other shapes represent the combinations of US-acquired cases and contacts associated with recent US outbreaks. Abbreviations: PHE, pretravel health encounter; ICER, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; QALY, quality-adjusted life year; MMR, measles-mumps-rubella.