| Literature DB >> 35592841 |
Abstract
Background: Congenital hypothyroidism (CH) is one of the most common preventable causes of mental retardation. Implementing newborn screening (NBS) in >52 countries enabled early detection and to initiate treatment of neonates with CH. India is yet to implement a national NBS program even though an estimated 5-15% of sick newborns suffer from genetic and metabolic disorders. Recent pilot studies confirm that the CH incidence rates range from 1 in 500 to 1 in 3,400 live births. Our objective was to estimate overall incidence rates of congenital hypothyroidism and to evaluate the costs and benefits of implementing universal NBS for CH in India.Entities:
Keywords: Benefit-Cost Analysis; India; congenital hypothyroidism; disability adjusted life year; economic evaluation; newborn; newborn screening; value of statistical life
Year: 2022 PMID: 35592841 PMCID: PMC9110855 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2022.788589
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Figure 1Effects of poor health on economy.
Input parameter pooled estimate for incidence of hypothyroidism in India.
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| 24,164,360 | MOHFW, GOI | ||
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| 0.000720 | 0.000583 | 0.000857 | Point estimate from our study |
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| Barden et al. ( | |||
| Mild ID | 0.4 | |||
| Moderate ID | 0.25 | |||
| Severe ID | 0.15 | |||
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| ACMG, Committee on Genetics ( | |||
| Mild ID | 0.27 | |||
| Moderate ID | 0.021 | |||
| Severe ID | 0.019 | |||
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| Mathers et al. ( | |||
| Mild ID | 0.29 | |||
| Moderate ID | 0.43 | |||
| Severe ID | 0.82 | |||
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| $6,427 | World Bank (PPP method) | ||
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| Screening Costs | $173,500,105 | Our estimates | ||
| Confirmation Assay cost | $125,020 | $101,196 | $148,843 | |
| Medication Costs: | $8,501,347 | $6,881,341 | $10,121,354 | |
| Follow up Costs | ||||
| Physician visits | $4,000,634 | $3,238,278 | $4,762,990 | |
| Laboratory costs | $1,500,238 | $1,214,354 | $1,786,121 |
ID-Intellectual Disability; Costs converted from INR to 2018 USD.
Severity of congenital hypothyroidism (CH) morbidity.
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| Mild ID | 6,964 (5,637–8,292) | 4,701 (3,805–5,597) |
| Moderate ID | 4,354 (3,523–5,182) | 365 (295–435) |
| Severe ID | 2,611 (2,114–3,109) | 330 (267–393) |
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ID, Intellectual Disability.
Lost disability adjusted life years (DALYs) from CH related intellectual disability.
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| Model 1 | Lost DALY (0,0,0.4) | 137,348 | 127,283 | 145,636 (117,884-173,388) | 410, 267 (332,087-488,446) |
| Lost DALY (0.03,1,0.04) | 64,972 | 60,211 | 68,893 (55,765-82,021) | 194,076 (157,093-231,059) | |
| Model 2 | Lost DALY (0,0,0.4) | 92,710 (75,043-110,376) | 10,692 (8,654-12,729) | 18,447 (14,932-21,962) | 121,849 (98,629-145,067) |
| Lost DALY (0.03,1,0.04) | 43,856 (35,499-52,213) | 5,058 (4,094-6,022) | 8,726 (7,064-10,389) | 57,640 (46,657-68,624) |
Disability-adjusted life year representation DALY (r,K,b) is used to describe the results where r, discount rate; K, age weighting modulation factor; b, parameter from age-weighting function; Ranges were given in brackets; ID, Intellectual disability; CH, Congenital hypothyroidism.
Pooled estimate for incidence of hypothyroidism in India.
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| Desai et al. ( | 2,481 | 1,322 | 20,095 |
| Desai et al. ( | 2,804 | 1,696 | 8,093 |
| Rama Devi and Naushad, ( | 1,700 | 1,064 | 4,223 |
| Sanghvi and Dewakar, ( | 500 | 275 | 2,749 |
| Kishore et al., ( | 1,042 | 719 | 1,893 |
| Sudha et al., ( | 900 | 673 | 1,357 |
| Kaur et al. ( | 1,400 | 959 | 2,594 |
| ICMR Chennai ( | 727 | 531 | 1,155 |
| ICMR Delhi ( | 1,141 | 793 | 2,032 |
| ICMR Hyderabad ( | 1,383 | 918 | 2,800 |
| ICMR Kolkata ( | 1,255 | 842 | 2,460 |
| ICMR Mumbai ( | 1,544 | 1,000 | 3,382 |
| Verma et al. ( | 1,706 | 1,429 | 2,117 |
| Verma et al. ( | 1,486 | 899 | 4,288 |
| Point Estimate with 95% CI (I2 = 56%) | 1,388 | 1,166 | 1,714 |
Estimated lost economic productivity—human capital method.
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| Model 1 | DALYs (0,0,0.4) | 410,267 | $1,133,817,984 (917,758,954–1,349,874,250) | $788,300,083 | $553,725,062 (448,207,861–659,240,913) |
| Benefit-Cost Ratio | 6 (4.8–7.1) | 3.9 (3.1–4.6) | 2.9 (2.3–3.5) | ||
| DALYs (0.03,1,0.04) | 194,076 | $536,350,374 (434,143,786–638,556,963) | $349,251,407 | $261,938,555 (212,023,709–311,853,401) | |
| Benefit-Cost Ratio | 2.8 (2.3–3.4) | 1.8 (1.5–2.2) | 1.4 (1.1–1.6) | ||
| Model 2 | DALYs (0,0,0.4) | 121,849 | $336,743,114 (272,572,090– 400,908,611) | $219,274,586 | $164,455,939 (133,116,602– 195,792,577) |
| Benefit-Cost Ratio | 1.8 (1.4–2.1) | 1.1 (0.94–1.4) | 0.87 (0.7–1) | ||
| DALYs (0.03,1,0.04) | 57,640 | $159,294,480 (128,941,751– 189,649,972) | $103,726,638 | $77,794,978 (62,971,553– 92,619,754) | |
| Benefit-Cost Ratio | 0.86 (0.68–1) | 0.56 (0.44–0.65) | 0.42 (0.33–0.49) | ||
Estimated lost economic productivity—value of statistical life method.
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| 1,028,320 | 30,696 | $12,593,604,819 (10,193,782,204–14,993,396,738) | $5,957,380,069 | 31.7–67.1 | $3,740,291,453 | $1,769,324,322 (1,432,188,843–2,106,490,498) | 9.4–19.9 |
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| 642,700 | 19,185 | $7,871,003,012 (6,371,113,878–9,370,872,961) | $3,723,362,543 | 19.8–41.9 | $2,337,682,158 | $1,105,827,701 (895,118,027–1,316,556,561) | 5.8–12.4 |
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| 347,634 | 10,377 | $4,257,397,850 (3,446,113,092–5,068,672,232) | $2,013,953,706 | 10.7–22.6 | $1,264,444,059 | $598,138,315 (484,166,193–712,120,814) | 3.1–6.7 |
Value of statistical life (VSL): Country level population average value of VSL estimate using GNI per capita and assumed income elasticity-based on GNI- India: $6,427(2018); GNI-USA: $57,900 (2017).
Value of statistical life year (VSLY): A constant VSLY averages health status over lifetime.
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Productivity calculated from monetized DALYs using VSLY over life time.