Sydney School of Public Health, The University of Sydney, The Lifehouse, Level 6-North, 119-143 Missenden Road, Camperdown, NSW, 2050, Australia.
Melanoma Institute Australia, The University of Sydney, North Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Appl Health Econ Health Policy. 2018 Apr;16(2):235-242. doi: 10.1007/s40258-017-0368-0.
Specialised surveillance using total body photography and digital dermoscopy to monitor people at very high risk of developing a second or subsequent melanoma has been reported as cost effective.
We aimed to estimate the 5-year healthcare budget impact of providing specialised surveillance for people at very high risk of subsequent melanoma from the perspective of the Australian healthcare system.
A budget impact model was constructed to assess the costs of monitoring and potential savings compared with current routine care based on identification of patients at the time of a melanoma diagnosis. We used data from a published cost-effectiveness analysis of specialised surveillance, and Cancer Registry data, to estimate the patient population and healthcare costs for 2017-2021.
When all eligible patients, estimated at 18% of patients with melanoma diagnosed annually in Australia, received specialised surveillance rather than routine care, the cumulative 5-year cost was estimated at $93.5 million Australian dollars ($AU) ($US 64 million) for specialised surveillance compared with $AU 120.7 million ($US 82.7 million) for routine care, delivering savings of $AU 27.2 million ($US 18.6 million). With a staggered introduction of 60% of eligible patients accessing surveillance in year 1, increasing to 90% in years 4 and 5, the cumulative cost over 5 years was estimated at $AU 98.1 million ($US 67.2 million), amounting to savings of $AU 22.6 million ($US 15.5 million) compared with routine care.
Specialised melanoma surveillance is likely to provide substantial cost savings for the Australian healthcare system.
使用全身摄影和数字皮肤镜进行专门监测,以监测极高风险人群发生第二或后续黑色素瘤的情况,已被报道为具有成本效益。
我们旨在从澳大利亚医疗保健系统的角度估算为极高风险黑色素瘤后续发病风险人群提供专门监测的 5 年医疗保健预算影响。
构建了一个预算影响模型,以根据黑色素瘤诊断时患者的识别情况,评估监测的成本和潜在节省与当前常规护理相比的情况。我们使用专门监测的成本效益分析和癌症登记数据来估计 2017-2021 年的患者人群和医疗保健成本。
当所有符合条件的患者(估计占澳大利亚每年诊断的黑色素瘤患者的 18%)接受专门监测而不是常规护理时,专门监测的累积 5 年成本估计为 9350 万澳元(6400 万美元),而常规护理的成本为 1.207 亿澳元(8270 万美元),专门监测可节省 2720 万澳元(1860 万美元)。在第 1 年有 60%的符合条件的患者逐步接受监测,第 4 年和第 5 年增加到 90%,5 年内的累积成本估计为 9810 万澳元(6720 万美元),与常规护理相比,节省了 2260 万澳元(1550 万美元)。
专门的黑色素瘤监测可能为澳大利亚医疗保健系统提供大量成本节省。