Health Economics Unit, School of Public Health & Family Medicine, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa.
Mailman School of Public Health, ICAP at Columbia University, New York, NY, USA.
Trop Med Int Health. 2018 Sep;23(9):950-959. doi: 10.1111/tmi.13121. Epub 2018 Jul 26.
To assess the costs and cost-effectiveness of transitioning from antiretroviral therapy (ART) initiation based on CD4 cell count and WHO clinical staging ('Option A') to universal ART ('Option B+') for all HIV-infected pregnant and breastfeeding women in Swaziland.
We measured the total costs of prevention of mother-to-child HIV transmission (PMTCT) service delivery at public sector facilities with empirical cost data collected at three points in time: once under Option A and again twice after transition to the Option B+ approach. The cost per woman treated per month includes recurrent costs (personnel, overheads, medication and diagnostic tests) and capital costs (buildings, furniture, start-up costs and training). Cost-effectiveness was estimated from the health services perspective as the cost per woman retained in care through 6 months postpartum. This analysis is nested within a larger stepped-wedge evaluation, which demonstrated a 26% increase in maternal retention after the transition to Option B+.
Across the five sites, the total cost for PMTCT during the study period (from August 2013 to October 2015, in 2015 US$) was $868,426 for Option B+ and $680 508 for Option A. The cost per woman treated per month was $183 for a woman on ART under Option B+, and $127 and $118 for a woman on ART and zidovudine (AZT), respectively, under Option A. The weighted average cost per woman treated on Option B+ was $826 compared to $525 under Option A. The main cost drivers were the start-up costs, additional training provided and staff time spent on PMTCT tasks for Option B+. The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio was estimated at $912 for every additional mother retained in care through six months postpartum.
The cost and cost-effectiveness outcomes from this study indicate that there is a robust economic case for pursuing the Option B+ approach in Swaziland and similar settings such as South Africa. Furthermore, these costs can be used to aid decision making and budgeting, for similar settings transitioning to test and treat strategy.
评估在斯威士兰将基于 CD4 细胞计数和世界卫生组织临床分期的抗逆转录病毒治疗(ART)起始(“方案 A”)转换为所有 HIV 感染孕妇和哺乳期妇女普遍接受 ART(“方案 B+”)的成本和成本效益。
我们使用在三个时间点收集的经验成本数据,衡量了在公立部门提供预防母婴传播(PMTCT)服务的总成本:一次是在“方案 A”下,两次是在过渡到“方案 B+”之后。每位治疗妇女每月的费用包括经常性费用(人员、管理费用、药物和诊断测试)和资本费用(建筑物、家具、启动成本和培训)。从卫生服务角度评估成本效益,即每位在产后 6 个月内保留在护理中的妇女的成本。该分析嵌套在一个更大的逐步楔形评估中,该评估显示,在过渡到“方案 B+”后,产妇保留率提高了 26%。
在五个地点,在研究期间(2013 年 8 月至 2015 年 10 月,2015 年美元)PMTCT 的总成本为“方案 B+”为 868426 美元,“方案 A”为 680508 美元。每月每位接受 ART 治疗的妇女的费用为“方案 B+”下接受治疗的妇女每人 183 美元,“方案 A”下接受 ART 和齐多夫定(AZT)治疗的妇女每人 127 美元和 118 美元。“方案 B+”下每位治疗妇女的加权平均成本为 826 美元,而“方案 A”下为 525 美元。主要成本驱动因素是“方案 B+”的启动成本、额外培训以及工作人员用于 PMTCT 任务的时间。增量成本效益比估计为每增加一位在产后 6 个月内接受护理的母亲需要 912 美元。
这项研究的成本和成本效益结果表明,在斯威士兰和南非等类似环境中,采用“方案 B+”方法具有强有力的经济依据。此外,这些成本可用于为类似环境下的测试和治疗策略的决策和预算提供帮助。