Goldhaber-Fiebert Jeremy D, Brandeau Margaret L
Stanford Health Policy, Centers for Health Policy and Primary Care and Outcomes Research, Stanford University, Stanford, CA (JDGF)
Department of Management Science and Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, CA (MLB).
Med Decis Making. 2015 Oct;35(7):818-46. doi: 10.1177/0272989X15583845. Epub 2015 Apr 29.
Current guidelines for economic evaluations of health interventions define relevant outcomes as those accruing to individuals receiving interventions. Little consensus exists on counting health impacts on current and future fertility and childbearing. Our objective was to characterize current practices for counting such health outcomes.
We developed a framework characterizing health interventions with direct and/or indirect effects on fertility and childbearing and how such outcomes are reported. We identified interventions spanning the framework and performed a targeted literature review for economic evaluations of these interventions. For each article, we characterized how the potential health outcomes from each intervention were considered, focusing on quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) associated with fertility and childbearing.
We reviewed 108 studies, identifying 7 themes: 1) Studies were heterogeneous in reporting outcomes. 2) Studies often selected outcomes for inclusion that tend to bias toward finding the intervention to be cost-effective. 3) Studies often avoided the challenges of assigning QALYs for pregnancy and fertility by instead considering cost per intermediate outcome. 4) Even for the same intervention, studies took heterogeneous approaches to outcome evaluation. 5) Studies used multiple, competing rationales for whether and how to include fertility-related QALYs and whose QALYs to include. 6) Studies examining interventions with indirect effects on fertility typically ignored such QALYs. 7) Even recent studies had these shortcomings. Limitations include that the review was targeted rather than systematic.
Economic evaluations inconsistently consider QALYs from current and future fertility and childbearing in ways that frequently appear biased toward the interventions considered. As the Panel on Cost-Effectiveness in Health and Medicine updates its guidelines, making the practice of cost-effectiveness analysis more consistent is a priority. Our study contributes to harmonizing methods in this respect.
当前健康干预经济评估指南将相关结果定义为接受干预的个体所产生的结果。在计算对当前和未来生育及妊娠的健康影响方面,几乎没有达成共识。我们的目标是描述计算此类健康结果的当前做法。
我们制定了一个框架,描述对生育和妊娠有直接和/或间接影响的健康干预措施,以及如何报告此类结果。我们确定了涵盖该框架的干预措施,并对这些干预措施的经济评估进行了有针对性的文献综述。对于每篇文章,我们描述了如何考虑每种干预措施潜在的健康结果,重点关注与生育和妊娠相关的质量调整生命年(QALY)。
我们回顾了108项研究,确定了7个主题:1)研究在报告结果方面存在异质性。2)研究通常选择纳入那些倾向于使干预措施被判定为具有成本效益的结果。3)研究通常通过考虑每个中间结果的成本来避免为妊娠和生育分配QALY的挑战。4)即使对于相同的干预措施,研究在结果评估上也采用了不同的方法。5)研究对于是否以及如何纳入与生育相关的QALY以及纳入谁的QALY使用了多种相互竞争的理由。6)研究对生育有间接影响的干预措施时通常忽略此类QALY。7)即使是近期的研究也存在这些缺点。局限性包括该综述是有针对性的而非系统性的。
经济评估在考虑当前和未来生育及妊娠的QALY时不一致,其方式往往偏向于所考虑的干预措施。随着健康与医学成本效益小组更新其指南,使成本效益分析的实践更加一致是当务之急。我们的研究有助于在这方面统一方法。