Prusa Andrea-Romana, Kasper David C, Sawers Larry, Walter Evelyn, Hayde Michael, Stillwaggon Eileen
Department of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, Toxoplasmosis Reference Laboratory, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
Department of Laboratory Medicine, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2017 Jul 10;11(7):e0005648. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0005648. eCollection 2017 Jul.
Primary infection of Toxoplasma gondii during pregnancy can be transmitted to the unborn child and may have serious consequences, including retinochoroiditis, hydrocephaly, cerebral calcifications, encephalitis, splenomegaly, hearing loss, blindness, and death. Austria, a country with moderate seroprevalence, instituted mandatory prenatal screening for toxoplasma infection to minimize the effects of congenital transmission. This work compares the societal costs of congenital toxoplasmosis under the Austrian national prenatal screening program with the societal costs that would have occurred in a No-Screening scenario.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We retrospectively investigated data from the Austrian Toxoplasmosis Register for birth cohorts from 1992 to 2008, including pediatric long-term follow-up until May 2013. We constructed a decision-analytic model to compare lifetime societal costs of prenatal screening with lifetime societal costs estimated in a No-Screening scenario. We included costs of treatment, lifetime care, accommodation of injuries, loss of life, and lost earnings that would have occurred in a No-Screening scenario and compared them with the actual costs of screening, treatment, lifetime care, accommodation, loss of life, and lost earnings. We replicated that analysis excluding loss of life and lost earnings to estimate the budgetary impact alone. Our model calculated total lifetime costs of €103 per birth under prenatal screening as carried out in Austria, saving €323 per birth compared with No-Screening. Without screening and treatment, lifetime societal costs for all affected children would have been €35 million per year; the implementation costs of the Austrian program are less than €2 million per year. Calculating only the budgetary impact, the national program was still cost-saving by more than €15 million per year and saved €258 million in 17 years.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Cost savings under a national program of prenatal screening for toxoplasma infection and treatment are outstanding. Our results are of relevance for health care providers by supplying economic data based on a unique national dataset including long-term follow-up of affected infants.
孕期初次感染弓形虫可传染给未出生的胎儿,并可能产生严重后果,包括视网膜脉络膜炎、脑积水、脑钙化、脑炎、脾肿大、听力丧失、失明和死亡。奥地利弓形虫血清阳性率中等,该国实行强制性产前弓形虫感染筛查,以尽量减少先天性传播的影响。本研究比较了奥地利国家产前筛查项目下先天性弓形虫病的社会成本与无筛查情况下可能产生的社会成本。
方法/主要发现:我们回顾性调查了奥地利弓形虫病登记处1992年至2008年出生队列的数据,包括直至2013年5月的儿科长期随访。我们构建了一个决策分析模型,以比较产前筛查的终生社会成本与无筛查情况下估计的终生社会成本。我们纳入了无筛查情况下可能发生的治疗成本、终生护理成本、损伤补偿成本、生命损失成本和收入损失成本,并将它们与筛查、治疗、终生护理、补偿、生命损失和收入损失的实际成本进行比较。我们重复了该分析,但排除了生命损失和收入损失,以单独估计预算影响。我们的模型计算出,按照奥地利实施的产前筛查,每例出生的终生总成本为103欧元,与无筛查相比,每例出生节省323欧元。如果不进行筛查和治疗,所有受影响儿童的终生社会成本每年将达3500万欧元;奥地利该项目的实施成本每年不到200万欧元。仅计算预算影响,国家项目每年仍可节省超过1500万欧元,并在17年内节省2.58亿欧元。
结论/意义:国家产前弓形虫感染筛查及治疗项目的成本节约非常显著。我们的研究结果为医疗保健提供者提供了基于独特国家数据集(包括对受影响婴儿的长期随访)的经济数据,具有重要意义。