Medical and Scientific Issues Unit, Cancer Council NSW, 153 Dowling St, Wooloomooloo, Sydney 2011, Australia.
World J Gastroenterol. 2012 Nov 14;18(42):6106-13. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v18.i42.6106.
To compare program costs of chronic hepatitis B (CHB) screening and treatment using Australian and other published CHB treatment guidelines.
Economic modeling demonstrated that in Australia a strategy of hepatocellular cancer (HCC) prevention in patients with CHB is more cost-effective than current standard care, or HCC screening. Based upon this model, we developed the B positive program to optimize CHB management of Australians born in countries of high CHB prevalence. We estimated CHB program costs using the B positive program algorithm and compared them to estimated costs of using the CHB treatment guidelines published by the Asian-Pacific, American and European Associations for the Study of Liver Disease (APASL, AASLD, EASL) and those suggested by an independent United States hepatology panel. We used a Markov model that factored in the costs of CHB screening and treatment, individualized by viral load and alanine aminotransferase levels, and calculated the relative costs of program components. Costs were discounted by 5% and calculated in Australian dollars (AUD).
Using the B positive algorithm, total program costs amount to 13,979,224 AUD, or 9634 AUD per patient. The least costly strategy is based upon using the AASLD guidelines, which would cost 34% less than our B positive algorithm. Using the EASL and the United States Expert Group guidelines would increase program costs by 46%. The largest expenditure relates to the cost of drug treatment (66.9% of total program costs). The contribution of CHB surveillance (20.2%) and HCC screening and surveillance (6.6%) is small--and together they represent only approximately a quarter of the total program costs.
The significant cost variations in CHB screening and treatment using different guidelines are relevant for clinicians and policy makers involved in designing population-based disease control programs.
比较使用澳大利亚和其他已发表的乙型肝炎(CHB)治疗指南进行慢性乙型肝炎(CHB)筛查和治疗的项目成本。
经济模型表明,在澳大利亚,对 CHB 患者进行肝细胞癌(HCC)预防的策略比目前的标准护理或 HCC 筛查更具成本效益。基于该模型,我们开发了 B 阳性计划,以优化澳大利亚出生于高 CHB 流行国家的 CHB 管理。我们使用 B 阳性计划算法估计 CHB 项目成本,并将其与使用亚太、美国和欧洲肝病研究协会(APASL、AASLD、EASL)发布的 CHB 治疗指南和独立美国肝病学小组建议的估计成本进行比较。我们使用了一个马尔可夫模型,该模型考虑了 CHB 筛查和治疗的成本,根据病毒载量和丙氨酸氨基转移酶水平进行个体化,并计算了项目各组成部分的相对成本。成本按 5%贴现,并以澳元(AUD)计算。
使用 B 阳性算法,总项目成本为 13979224 澳元,或每位患者 9634 澳元。成本最低的策略是基于使用 AASLD 指南,这将比我们的 B 阳性算法节省 34%。使用 EASL 和美国专家组指南将增加项目成本 46%。最大的支出与药物治疗的成本(占项目总成本的 66.9%)有关。CHB 监测(占项目总成本的 20.2%)和 HCC 筛查和监测(占 6.6%)的贡献较小,两者合计仅占项目总成本的四分之一左右。
使用不同指南进行 CHB 筛查和治疗的显著成本差异与参与设计基于人群的疾病控制计划的临床医生和政策制定者有关。