Hatz Maximilian H M, Schremser Katharina, Rogowski Wolf H
Hamburg Center for Health Economics, University of Hamburg, 20354, Hamburg, Germany,
Pharmacoeconomics. 2014 May;32(5):443-55. doi: 10.1007/s40273-014-0143-0.
Individualized medicine (IM) is a rapidly evolving field that is associated with both visions of more effective care at lower costs and fears of highly priced, low-value interventions. It is unclear which view is supported by the current evidence.
Our objective was to systematically review the health economic evidence related to IM and to derive general statements on its cost-effectiveness.
A literature search of MEDLINE database for English- and German-language studies was conducted.
Cost-effectiveness and cost-utility studies for technologies meeting the MEDLINE medical subject headings (MeSH) definition of IM (genetically targeted interventions) were reviewed. This was followed by a standardized extraction of general study characteristics and cost-effectiveness results.
Most of the 84 studies included in the synthesis were from the USA (n = 43, 51 %), cost-utility studies (n = 66, 79 %), and published since 2005 (n = 60, 71 %). The results ranged from dominant to dominated. The median value (cost-utility studies) was calculated to be rounded $US22,000 per quality-adjusted life year (QALY) gained (adjusted to $US, year 2008 values), which is equal to the rounded median cost-effectiveness in the peer-reviewed English-language literature according to a recent review. Many studies reported more than one strategy of IM with highly varying cost-effectiveness ratios. Generally, results differed according to test type, and tests for disease prognosis or screening appeared to be more favorable than tests to stratify patients by response or by risk of adverse effects. However, these results were not significant.
Different definitions of IM could have been used. Quality assessment of the studies was restricted to analyzing transparency.
IM neither seems to display superior cost-effectiveness than other types of medical interventions nor to be economically inferior. Instead, rather than 'whether' healthcare was individualized, the question of 'how' it was individualized was of economic relevance.
个体化医疗(IM)是一个快速发展的领域,它既带来了以更低成本提供更有效治疗的愿景,也引发了对高价、低价值干预措施的担忧。目前尚不清楚现有证据支持哪种观点。
我们的目的是系统回顾与个体化医疗相关的卫生经济学证据,并得出关于其成本效益的一般性结论。
对MEDLINE数据库进行了文献检索,以查找英语和德语研究。
对符合MEDLINE医学主题词(MeSH)定义的个体化医疗(基因靶向干预)技术的成本效益和成本效用研究进行了综述。随后对一般研究特征和成本效益结果进行了标准化提取。
纳入综合分析的84项研究中,大多数来自美国(n = 43,51%),是成本效用研究(n = 66,79%),且自2005年以来发表(n = 60,71%)。结果从占优到被占优不等。计算得出的中位数价值(成本效用研究)为每获得一个质量调整生命年(QALY)约22,000美元(根据2008年美元价值进行调整),这与最近一项综述中同行评审的英语文献中的中位数成本效益大致相当。许多研究报告了不止一种个体化医疗策略,其成本效益比差异很大。一般来说,结果因测试类型而异,疾病预后或筛查测试似乎比根据反应或不良反应风险对患者进行分层的测试更具优势。然而,这些结果并不显著。
可能使用了不同的个体化医疗定义。研究的质量评估仅限于分析透明度。
个体化医疗似乎既不比其他类型的医疗干预具有更高的成本效益,也不具有经济劣势。相反,与其关注医疗是否个体化,“如何”实现个体化的问题在经济上更具相关性。