Duarte A, Walker J, Walker S, Richardson G, Holm Hansen C, Martin P, Murray G, Sculpher M, Sharpe M
Centre for Health Economics, University of York, Heslington, York, UK.
Psychological Medicine Research, University of Oxford Department of Psychiatry, Warneford Hospital, Oxford, UK.
J Psychosom Res. 2015 Dec;79(6):465-70. doi: 10.1016/j.jpsychores.2015.10.012. Epub 2015 Nov 9.
Comorbid major depression is associated with reduced quality of life and greater use of healthcare resources. A recent randomised trial (SMaRT, Symptom Management Research Trials, Oncology-2) found that a collaborative care treatment programme (Depression Care for People with Cancer, DCPC) was highly effective in treating depression in patients with cancer. This study aims to estimate the cost-effectiveness of DCPC compared with usual care from a health service perspective.
Costs were estimated using UK national unit cost estimates and health outcomes measured using quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs). Incremental cost-effectiveness of DCPC compared with usual care was calculated and scenario analyses performed to test alternative assumptions on costs and missing data. Uncertainty was characterised using cost-effectiveness acceptability curves. The probability of DCPC being cost-effective was determined using the UK National Institute for Health and Care Excellence's (NICE) cost-effectiveness threshold range of £ 20,000 to £ 30,000 per QALY gained.
DCPC cost on average £ 631 more than usual care per patient, and resulted in a mean gain of 0.066 QALYs, yielding an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of £ 9549 per QALY. The probability of DCPC being cost-effective was 0.9 or greater at cost-effectiveness thresholds above £ 20,000 per QALY for the base case and scenario analyses.
Compared with usual care, DCPC is likely to be cost-effective at the current thresholds used by NICE. This study adds to the weight of evidence that collaborative care treatment models are cost-effective for depression, and provides new evidence regarding their use in specialist medical settings.
共病的重度抑郁症与生活质量下降及更多地使用医疗资源相关。最近一项随机试验(SMaRT,症状管理研究试验,肿瘤学 - 2)发现,一种协作式护理治疗方案(癌症患者抑郁症护理,DCPC)在治疗癌症患者的抑郁症方面非常有效。本研究旨在从卫生服务角度评估DCPC与常规护理相比的成本效益。
使用英国国家单位成本估算来估计成本,并使用质量调整生命年(QALYs)来衡量健康结果。计算DCPC与常规护理相比的增量成本效益,并进行情景分析以测试关于成本和缺失数据的替代假设。使用成本效益可接受性曲线来描述不确定性。使用英国国家卫生与保健优化研究所(NICE)每获得一个QALY 20,000至30,000英镑的成本效益阈值范围来确定DCPC具有成本效益的概率。
DCPC平均每位患者比常规护理多花费631英镑,并导致平均获得0.066个QALYs,每QALY的增量成本效益比为9549英镑。在基础案例和情景分析中,对于每QALY成本效益阈值高于20,000英镑的情况,DCPC具有成本效益的概率为0.9或更高。
与常规护理相比,在NICE使用的当前阈值下,DCPC可能具有成本效益。本研究增加了协作式护理治疗模式对抑郁症具有成本效益的证据权重,并提供了关于其在专科医疗环境中使用的新证据。