Division of Infectious Diseases.
Clin Infect Dis. 2013 Oct;57(7):1021-6. doi: 10.1093/cid/cit412. Epub 2013 Jun 20.
With an emerging array of rapid diagnostic tests for tuberculosis, cost-effectiveness analyses are needed to inform scale-up in various populations and settings. Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-associated tuberculosis poses unique challenges in estimating and interpreting the cost-effectiveness of novel diagnostic tools. First, gains in sensitivity and specificity do not directly correlate with impact on clinical outcomes. Second, the cost-effectiveness of implementing tuberculosis diagnostics in HIV-infected populations is heavily influenced by downstream costs of HIV care. As a result, tuberculosis diagnostics may appear less cost-effective in this population than among HIV-uninfected individuals, raising important ethical and policy questions about the design and interpretation of cost-effectiveness analyses in this setting. Third, conventional cost-effectiveness benchmarks may be inadequate for making decisions about whether to adopt new diagnostics. If we are to appropriately deploy novel diagnostics for tuberculosis to people living with HIV in resource-constrained settings, these challenges in measuring cost-effectiveness must be more widely recognized and addressed.
随着针对结核病的快速诊断检测方法不断涌现,需要进行成本效益分析,以在不同人群和环境中为推广这些方法提供信息。在评估和解释新型诊断工具的成本效益时,人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)相关结核病带来了独特的挑战。首先,敏感性和特异性的提高并不直接与临床结果的影响相关。其次,在 HIV 感染者中实施结核病诊断的成本效益受到 HIV 治疗的下游成本的严重影响。因此,与 HIV 未感染者相比,结核病诊断在这一人群中的成本效益可能较低,这引发了关于在这一背景下设计和解释成本效益分析的重要伦理和政策问题。第三,传统的成本效益基准可能不足以用于做出是否采用新诊断方法的决策。如果我们要在资源有限的环境中为 HIV 感染者适当部署新型诊断工具,就必须更广泛地认识和解决衡量成本效益方面的这些挑战。