Farnham Paul G, Hutchinson Angela B, Sansom Stephanie L, Branson Bernard M
Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1600 Clifton Rd. NE, MS E-48, Atlanta, GA 30333, USA.
Public Health Rep. 2008 Nov-Dec;123 Suppl 3(Suppl 3):51-62. doi: 10.1177/00333549081230S307.
In 2006, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommended routine human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) screening for people aged 13 to 64 years in all U.S. health-care settings. Earlier recommendations focused on those at high risk for HIV and included more extensive pretest counseling. HIV screening may also involve either rapid or conventional testing. The purpose of this research was to estimate the costs of these different testing procedures and the cost per HIV-infected patient correctly receiving test results in three health-care scenarios that illustrated these policy differences.
The study estimated the costs of rapid and conventional HIV testing in the following scenarios: (1) sexually transmitted disease (STD) clinic counseling and testing (CT), (2) STD clinic screening, and (3) emergency department (ED) screening. Costs were estimated from the provider perspective in 2006 dollars. A decision analytic model was developed to estimate the cost per HIV-infected patient notified of test results using the two testing procedures in the three scenarios.
Although the complete rapid testing procedure was more expensive than conventional testing, the cost per HIV-infected patient receiving test results was lower for the rapid test compared with conventional testing in all scenarios. Per-patient costs of receiving results were lowest in the ED screening scenario and highest in the STD CT scenario. These costs were sensitive to changes in test costs, HIV prevalence, and return rates following conventional tests.
HIV screening in general health-care settings is economically feasible, particularly with rapid tests that lower the cost of HIV-infected patients receiving their test results.
2006年,美国疾病控制与预防中心(CDC)建议在美国所有医疗保健机构对13至64岁的人群进行常规的人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)筛查。早期的建议聚焦于HIV高危人群,并包括更广泛的检测前咨询。HIV筛查也可能涉及快速检测或传统检测。本研究的目的是估计这些不同检测程序的成本,以及在三种说明这些政策差异的医疗保健场景中,每位正确获得检测结果的HIV感染患者的成本。
该研究估计了以下场景中快速和传统HIV检测的成本:(1)性传播疾病(STD)诊所咨询与检测(CT),(2)STD诊所筛查,以及(3)急诊科(ED)筛查。成本以2006年美元从提供者的角度进行估计。开发了一个决策分析模型,以估计在三种场景中使用这两种检测程序通知检测结果的每位HIV感染患者的成本。
尽管完整的快速检测程序比传统检测更昂贵,但在所有场景中,快速检测获得检测结果的每位HIV感染患者的成本都低于传统检测。在急诊科筛查场景中获得结果的人均成本最低,在STD CT场景中最高。这些成本对检测成本、HIV流行率以及传统检测后的返回率变化敏感。
在一般医疗保健机构中进行HIV筛查在经济上是可行的,特别是使用快速检测可以降低获得检测结果的HIV感染患者的成本。