Élisabeth Mercier, John R Fullarton, Bosco A Paes, Ian P Keary, Barry S Rodgers-Gray, Nisha Thampi, Robert Delatolla
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Aims: To compare the cost-effectiveness of wastewater and environmental monitoring (WEM) versus clinical surveillance (CS)-guided respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) prophylaxis programs in Canada.
Materials and methods: A cost-utility model was developed comprising two identical decision trees for RSV-WEM and RSV-CS. Within each tree, children could conservatively receive nirsevimab prophylaxis (71% coverage) or not at the start of the RSV season and subsequently experience an RSV-related hospitalization, medically-attended, non-hospitalized RSV-infection, or be uninfected/non-medically attended. All children could experience respiratory morbidity up to age 18 years, with higher rates following RSV-related hospitalization. All prophylaxis and RSV-related costs were identical for RSV-WEM and RSV-CS. No costs were assumed for RSV-CS; whereas a cost of CAD$12.31 per infant (infrastructure: CAD$4.07 plus sampling: CAD$8.24) was assumed if a new RSV-WEM system was initiated, with all infrastructure costs included in year 1. Predicated on data from the 2022-23 Ontario RSV season, RSV-WEM was assumed to provide a 15.1% benefit for earlier initiation of the prophylaxis program versus RSV-CS. Outcomes were modelled over an 18-year time horizon (1.5% discounting).
Results: RSV-WEM dominated (lower costs and higher utilities) RSV-CS and remained unaltered in all scenario analyses. Scenarios included: amortization of RSV-WEM infrastructure costs over 5 years; using existing WEM infrastructure for RSV detection; 25% reduction in extra cases identified by RSV-WEM; 50%-90% prophylaxis coverage based on real-world data; and 25% increase in the cost of RSV-WEM.
Conclusions: The integration of RSV-WEM appears a highly cost-effective strategy (vs RSV-CS exclusively) to guide the earlier launch of RSV seasonal prophylaxis in Canada.
期刊介绍:
Journal of Medical Economics'' mission is to provide ethical, unbiased and rapid publication of quality content that is validated by rigorous peer review. The aim of Journal of Medical Economics is to serve the information needs of the pharmacoeconomics and healthcare research community, to help translate research advances into patient care and be a leader in transparency/disclosure by facilitating a collaborative and honest approach to publication.
Journal of Medical Economics publishes high-quality economic assessments of novel therapeutic and device interventions for an international audience