Connock M, Stevens C, Fry-Smith A, Jowett S, Fitzmaurice D, Moore D, Song F
Department of Public Health and Epidemiology, University of Birmingham, UK.
Health Technol Assess. 2007 Oct;11(38):iii-iv, ix-66. doi: 10.3310/hta11380.
To examine the clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of self-testing and self-management of oral anticoagulation treatment compared with clinic-based monitoring.
Major electronic databases were searched up to September 2005.
A systematic review was undertaken of relevant data from selected studies. Results about complication events and deaths were pooled in meta-analyses using risk difference (RD) as the outcome statistic. Heterogeneity across trials and possible publication bias were statistically measured. Subgroup analyses (post hoc) were conducted to compare results of self-testing versus self-management, low versus high trial quality, trials conducted in the UK versus trials in other countries and industry versus other sponsors. A Markov-type, state-transition model was developed. Stochastic simulations using the model were conducted to investigate uncertainty in estimated model parameters.
In the 16 randomised and eight non-randomised trials selected, patient self-monitoring of oral anticoagulation therapy was found to be more effective than poor-quality usual care provided by family doctors and as effective as good-quality specialised anticoagulation clinics in maintaining the quality of anticoagulation therapy. There was no significant RD of major bleeding events between patient self-monitoring and usual care controls and pooled analyses found that compared with primary care or anticoagulation control (AC) clinics, self-monitoring was statistically significantly associated with fewer thromboembolic events. However, the reduction in complication events and deaths was not consistently associated with the improvement of AC; in some trials this may be due to alternative explanations, including patient education and patient empowerment. Also, the improved AC and the reduction of major complications and deaths by patient self-monitoring were mainly observed in trials conducted outside the UK. According to UK-specific data, for every 100 eligible patients, 24% would agree to conduct self-monitoring, 17 of the 24 patients (70%) could be successfully trained and able to carry out self-monitoring and only 14 of these (80%) would conduct long-term self-monitoring. Seven cost-effectiveness studies were identified and the study that provided the most relevant UK data found that patient self-management was more expensive than current routine care (417 pounds versus 122 pounds per patient-year) and concluded that using a cost-effectiveness threshold of 30,000 pounds per quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) gained, patient self-management does not appear to be cost-effective. De novo modelling for this report found that the incremental cost per QALY gained by patient self-monitoring is 122,365 pounds over 5 years and 63,655 pounds over 10 years. The estimated probability that patient self-monitoring is cost-effective (up to 30,000 pounds/QALY) is 44% over a 10-year period. Wide adoption of patient self-monitoring of anticoagulation therapy would cost the NHS an estimated additional 8-14 million pounds per year.
For selected and successfully trained patients, self-monitoring is effective and safe for long-term oral anticoagulation therapy. In general, patient self-management (PSM) is unlikely to be more cost-effective than the current specialised anticoagulation clinics in the UK; self-monitoring may enhance the quality of life for some patients who are frequently away from home, who are in employment or education, or those who find it difficult to travel to clinics. Further research is needed into alternative dosing regimes, the clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of patient education and training in long-term oral anticoagulation therapy, UK-relevant cost-effectiveness, the effectiveness of PSM in children, and the potential future developments of near-patient testing devices.
比较口服抗凝治疗的自我检测与自我管理和基于诊所的监测相比的临床有效性和成本效益。
检索主要电子数据库至2005年9月。
对所选研究的相关数据进行系统综述。使用风险差(RD)作为结果统计量,将并发症事件和死亡的结果汇总到荟萃分析中。对试验间的异质性和可能的发表偏倚进行统计学测量。进行亚组分析(事后分析)以比较自我检测与自我管理、试验质量低与高、在英国进行的试验与其他国家的试验以及行业与其他资助者的结果。开发了一个马尔可夫型状态转换模型。使用该模型进行随机模拟以研究估计模型参数中的不确定性。
在所选的16项随机试验和8项非随机试验中,发现患者自我监测口服抗凝治疗比家庭医生提供的低质量常规护理更有效,并且在维持抗凝治疗质量方面与高质量的专业抗凝诊所一样有效。患者自我监测与常规护理对照之间主要出血事件的RD无显著差异,汇总分析发现,与初级护理或抗凝对照(AC)诊所相比,自我监测与较少的血栓栓塞事件在统计学上显著相关。然而,并发症事件和死亡的减少与AC的改善并不一致相关;在一些试验中,这可能是由于其他解释,包括患者教育和患者赋权。此外,患者自我监测导致的AC改善以及主要并发症和死亡的减少主要在英国以外进行的试验中观察到。根据英国的特定数据,每100名符合条件的患者中,24%会同意进行自我监测,24名患者中的17名(70%)可以成功接受培训并能够进行自我监测,其中只有14名(80%)会进行长期自我监测。确定了7项成本效益研究,提供最相关英国数据的研究发现患者自我管理比当前常规护理更昂贵(每位患者每年417英镑对122英镑),并得出结论,使用每获得一个质量调整生命年(QALY)30,000英镑的成本效益阈值,患者自我管理似乎不具有成本效益。本报告的重新建模发现,患者自我监测每获得一个QALY的增量成本在5年内为122,365英镑,在10年内为63,655英镑。在10年期间,患者自我监测具有成本效益(高达30,000英镑/QALY)的估计概率为44%。广泛采用患者自我监测抗凝治疗估计每年将使英国国家医疗服务体系(NHS)额外花费800 - 1400万英镑。
对于选定并成功培训的患者,自我监测对于长期口服抗凝治疗是有效且安全的。总体而言,在英国,患者自我管理(PSM)不太可能比当前的专业抗凝诊所更具成本效益;自我监测可能会提高一些经常离家、就业或上学或难以前往诊所的患者的生活质量。需要进一步研究替代给药方案、患者教育和培训在长期口服抗凝治疗中的临床有效性和成本效益、与英国相关的成本效益、PSM在儿童中的有效性以及即时检测设备未来可能的发展。