Infectious Diseases Institute, Makerere College of Health Sciences, Kampala, Uganda ; Pfizer, New York, New York, United States of America.
PLoS Med. 2013 Nov;10(11):e1001545. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001545. Epub 2013 Nov 5.
Untreated syphilis in pregnancy is associated with adverse clinical outcomes for the infant. Most syphilis infections occur in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), where coverage of antenatal screening for syphilis is inadequate. Recently introduced point-of-care syphilis tests have high accuracy and demonstrate potential to increase coverage of antenatal screening. However, country-specific cost-effectiveness data for these tests are limited. The objective of this analysis was to evaluate the cost-effectiveness and budget impact of antenatal syphilis screening for 43 countries in SSA and estimate the impact of universal screening on stillbirths, neonatal deaths, congenital syphilis, and disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) averted.
The decision analytic model reflected the perspective of the national health care system and was based on the sensitivity (86%) and specificity (99%) reported for the immunochromatographic strip (ICS) test. Clinical outcomes of infants born to syphilis-infected mothers on the end points of stillbirth, neonatal death, and congenital syphilis were obtained from published sources. Treatment was assumed to consist of three injections of benzathine penicillin. Country-specific inputs included the antenatal prevalence of syphilis, annual number of live births, proportion of women with at least one antenatal care visit, per capita gross national income, and estimated hourly nurse wages. In all 43 sub-Saharan African countries analyzed, syphilis screening is highly cost-effective, with an average cost/DALY averted of US$11 (range: US$2-US$48). Screening remains highly cost-effective even if the average prevalence falls from the current rate of 3.1% (range: 0.6%-14.0%) to 0.038% (range: 0.002%-0.113%). Universal antenatal screening of pregnant women in clinics may reduce the annual number of stillbirths by up to 64,000, neonatal deaths by up to 25,000, and annual incidence of congenital syphilis by up to 32,000, and avert up to 2.6 million DALYs at an estimated annual direct medical cost of US$20.8 million.
Use of ICS tests for antenatal syphilis screening is highly cost-effective in SSA. Substantial reduction in DALYs can be achieved at a relatively modest budget impact. In SSA, antenatal programs should expand access to syphilis screening using the ICS test. Please see later in the article for the Editors' Summary.
未经治疗的妊娠梅毒可导致婴儿出现不良临床结局。大多数梅毒感染发生在撒哈拉以南非洲地区(SSA),而那里的梅毒产前筛查覆盖率不足。最近推出的即时检测梅毒试验具有较高的准确性,并有可能提高产前筛查的覆盖率。然而,这些检测方法在特定国家的成本效益数据有限。本分析旨在评估 43 个 SSA 国家进行产前梅毒筛查的成本效益和预算影响,并估计普遍筛查对避免死产、新生儿死亡、先天性梅毒和残疾调整生命年(DALY)的影响。
决策分析模型反映了国家卫生保健系统的观点,并基于免疫层析试验(ICS)报告的灵敏度(86%)和特异性(99%)。从已发表的文献中获得了感染梅毒的母亲所生婴儿在死产、新生儿死亡和先天性梅毒终点的临床结局。假设治疗包括三次苄星青霉素注射。国家特定投入包括梅毒的产前流行率、活产年度数量、至少有一次产前护理就诊的妇女比例、人均国民总收入和估计的护士每小时工资。在分析的 43 个撒哈拉以南非洲国家中,梅毒筛查具有很高的成本效益,平均每避免一个 DALY 的成本为 11 美元(范围:2-48 美元)。即使平均流行率从目前的 3.1%(范围:0.6%-14.0%)降至 0.038%(范围:0.002%-0.113%),筛查仍然具有很高的成本效益。在诊所对孕妇进行普遍产前筛查,每年可能减少多达 64000 例死产、25000 例新生儿死亡和多达 32000 例先天性梅毒,每年可避免多达 260 万残疾调整生命年,直接医疗费用估计为 2080 万美元。
在 SSA,使用 ICS 试验进行产前梅毒筛查具有很高的成本效益。在相对较小的预算影响下,可以实现 DALY 的大量减少。在 SSA,产前计划应扩大使用 ICS 试验进行梅毒筛查的机会。