Department of Public Health and Policy, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
Cost Eff Resour Alloc. 2010 Feb 17;8(1):1. doi: 10.1186/1478-7547-8-1.
The identification of safe and effective alternatives to blood transfusion is a public health priority. In sub-Saharan Africa, blood shortage is a cause of mortality and morbidity. Blood transfusion can also transmit viral infections. Giving tranexamic acid (TXA) to bleeding surgical patients has been shown to reduce both the number of blood transfusions and the volume of blood transfused. The objective of this study is to investigate whether routinely administering TXA to bleeding elective surgical patients is cost effective by both averting deaths occurring from the shortage of blood, and by preventing infections from blood transfusions.
A decision tree was constructed to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of providing TXA compared with no TXA in patients with surgical bleeding in four African countries with different human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) prevalence and blood donation rates (Kenya, South Africa, Tanzania and Botswana). The principal outcome measures were cost per life saved and cost per infection averted (HIV, Hepatitis B, Hepatitis C) averted in 2007 International dollars ($). The probability of receiving a blood transfusion with and without TXA and the risk of blood borne viral infection were estimated. The impact of uncertainty in model parameters was explored using one-way deterministic sensitivity analyses. Probabilistic sensitivity analysis was performed using Monte Carlo simulation.
The incremental cost per life saved is $87 for Kenya and $93 for Tanzania. In Botswana and South Africa, TXA administration is not life saving but is highly cost saving since fewer units of blood are transfused. Further, in Botswana the administration of TXA averts one case of HIV and four cases of Hepatitis B (HBV) per 1,000 surgical patients. In South Africa, one case of HBV is averted per 1,000 surgical patients. Probabilistic sensitivity analyses confirmed the robustness of the model.
An economic argument can be made for giving TXA to bleeding elective surgical patients. In countries where there is a blood shortage, TXA would be a cost effective way to reduce mortality. In countries where there is no blood shortage, TXA would reduce healthcare costs and avert blood borne infections.
寻找安全有效的输血替代品是公共卫生的重点。在撒哈拉以南非洲地区,血液短缺是导致死亡率和发病率上升的原因之一。血液输注也可能传播病毒感染。在出血性手术患者中使用氨甲环酸(TXA)已被证明可减少输血次数和输血量。本研究旨在调查在有或没有出血性手术患者中常规给予 TXA 是否具有成本效益,既可以避免因血液短缺导致的死亡,又可以预防输血感染。
构建决策树以评估在肯尼亚、南非、坦桑尼亚和博茨瓦纳四个具有不同人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)流行率和献血率的非洲国家中,为外科出血患者提供 TXA 与不提供 TXA 的成本效益。主要结果测量指标为 2007 年国际美元($)的每例生命挽救成本和每例感染成本(HIV、乙型肝炎、丙型肝炎)。估计了输血和无 TXA 输血的概率以及血液传播病毒感染的风险。通过单向确定性灵敏度分析探讨了模型参数不确定性的影响。使用蒙特卡罗模拟进行概率敏感性分析。
肯尼亚的增量生命挽救成本为 87 美元,坦桑尼亚为 93 美元。在博茨瓦纳和南非,TXA 的使用虽然不能挽救生命,但由于输血量减少,成本效益极高。此外,在博茨瓦纳,每 1000 例手术患者中,TXA 可预防 1 例 HIV 和 4 例乙型肝炎(HBV)感染。在南非,每 1000 例手术患者中可预防 1 例 HBV 感染。概率敏感性分析证实了该模型的稳健性。
为出血性择期手术患者使用 TXA 具有经济学意义。在血液短缺的国家,TXA 是降低死亡率的有效方法。在不缺乏血液的国家,TXA 可降低医疗保健成本并预防血源性感染。