Kortz Teresa Bleakly, Herzel Benjamin, Marseille Elliot, Kahn James G
Department of Pediatrics, University of California, San Francisco, California, USA.
Philip R Lee Institute for Health Policy Studies, University of California, San Francisco, California, USA.
BMJ Open. 2017 Jul 10;7(7):e015344. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-015344.
Pneumonia is the largest infectious cause of death in children under 5 years globally, and limited resource settings bear an overwhelming proportion of this disease burden. Bubble continuous positive airway pressure (bCPAP), an accepted supportive therapy, is often thought of as cost-prohibitive in these settings. We hypothesise that bCPAP is a cost-effective intervention in a limited resource setting and this study aims to determine the cost-effectiveness of bCPAP, using Malawi as an example.
Cost-effectiveness analysis.
District and central hospitals in Malawi.
Children aged 1 month-5 years with severe pneumonia, as defined by WHO criteria.
Using a decision tree analysis, we compared standard of care (including low-flow oxygen and antibiotics) to standard of care plus bCPAP.
For each treatment arm, we determined the costs, clinical outcomes and averted disability-adjusted life years (DALYs). We assigned input values from a review of the literature, including applicable clinical trials, and calculated an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER).
In the base case analysis, the cost of bCPAP per patient was $15 per day and $41 per hospitalisation, with an incremental net cost of $64 per pneumonia episode. bCPAP averts 5.0 DALYs per child treated, with an ICER of $12.88 per DALY averted compared with standard of care. In one-way sensitivity analyses, the most influential uncertainties were case fatality rates (ICER range $9-32 per DALY averted). In a multi-way sensitivity analysis, the median ICER was $12.97 per DALY averted (90% CI, $12.77 to $12.99).
bCPAP is a cost-effective intervention for severe paediatric pneumonia in Malawi. These results may be used to inform policy decisions, including support for widespread use of bCPAP in similar settings.
肺炎是全球5岁以下儿童死亡的最大感染性病因,资源有限地区承担了这一疾病负担的绝大部分。气泡持续气道正压通气(bCPAP)是一种公认的支持性治疗方法,在这些地区通常被认为成本过高。我们假设bCPAP在资源有限地区是一种具有成本效益的干预措施,本研究旨在以马拉维为例确定bCPAP的成本效益。
成本效益分析。
马拉维的地区医院和中心医院。
符合世界卫生组织标准定义的1个月至5岁重度肺炎儿童。
使用决策树分析,我们将标准治疗(包括低流量吸氧和抗生素)与标准治疗加bCPAP进行了比较。
对于每个治疗组,我们确定了成本、临床结局和避免的伤残调整生命年(DALYs)。我们从文献综述(包括适用的临床试验)中获取输入值,并计算了增量成本效益比(ICER)。
在基础病例分析中,每位患者使用bCPAP的成本为每天15美元,每次住院41美元,每例肺炎发作的增量净成本为64美元。bCPAP每治疗一名儿童可避免5.0个DALYs,与标准治疗相比,ICER为每避免一个DALYs 12.88美元。在单向敏感性分析中,最具影响力的不确定性因素是病死率(ICER范围为每避免一个DALYs 9至32美元)。在多向敏感性分析中,ICER中位数为每避免一个DALYs 12.97美元(90%CI,12.77至12.99美元)。
bCPAP是马拉维治疗重度小儿肺炎的一种具有成本效益的干预措施。这些结果可用于为政策决策提供信息,包括支持在类似环境中广泛使用bCPAP。