Division of Primary Care, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK.
Community and Health Research Unit, University of Lincoln, Lincolnshire, UK.
Addiction. 2019 Feb;114(2):353-365. doi: 10.1111/add.14476. Epub 2018 Dec 5.
Previous evaluations of smoking cessation interventions in pregnancy have several limitations. Our solution to these limitations is the Economics of Smoking in Pregnancy (ESIP) model, which estimates the life-time cost-effectiveness of smoking cessation interventions in pregnancy from a National Health Service (NHS) and personal social services perspective. We aim to (1) describe how ESIP has been constructed and (2) illustrate its use with trial data.
ESIP links mothers' and offspring pregnancy outcomes to estimate the burdens of smoking-related disease they experience with different rates of smoking in pregnancy, both in pregnancy and throughout their life-times. Smoking rates are inputted by model users. ESIP then estimates the costs of treating disease burdens and also mothers' and offspring life-years and quality-adjusted life years (QALYs). By comparing costs incurred and healthy life following different smoking rates, ESIP estimates incremental cost-effectiveness and benefit-cost ratios for mothers or offspring or both combined. We illustrate ESIP use using data from a pragmatic randomized controlled trial that tested a smoking cessation intervention in pregnancy.
Throughout women's and offspring life-times, the intervention proved cheaper than usual care, having a negative incremental cost of £38.37 (interquartile range = £21.46-56.96) and it improved health, demonstrating a 0.04 increase in incremental QALYs for mothers and offspring, implying that it is 'dominant' over usual care. Benefit-cost ratios suggested that every £1 spent would generate a median of £14 (interquartile range = £8-20) in health-care savings.
Economics of Smoking in Pregnancy is the first economic model to link mothers' and infants' costs and benefits while reporting cost-effectiveness in readily-comparable units. Using ESIP with data from a trial which reported only short-term economic analysis showed that the intervention was very likely to be cost-effective in the longer term and to generate health-care savings.
以往关于孕期戒烟干预的评估存在若干局限性。我们的解决方案是经济学视角下的孕期吸烟问题(ESIP)模型,该模型从国民保健服务(NHS)和个人社会服务的角度来估计孕期戒烟干预的终生成本效益。我们的目标是:(1)描述 ESIP 的构建方式;(2)结合试验数据来说明其用法。
ESIP 将母亲和后代的妊娠结局联系起来,以估计她们在不同孕期吸烟率下所经历的与吸烟相关疾病的负担,包括孕期和整个生命周期。模型使用者输入吸烟率。ESIP 随后估计治疗疾病负担的成本,以及母亲和后代的生命年和质量调整生命年(QALY)。通过比较不同吸烟率下的成本和健康生命,ESIP 估计母亲或后代或两者联合的增量成本效益和受益成本比。我们使用一项实用随机对照试验的数据来说明 ESIP 的用法,该试验测试了一种孕期戒烟干预措施。
在女性和后代的整个生命周期中,该干预措施比常规护理更便宜,其增量成本为负 38.37 英镑(四分位距=21.46-56.96),并且提高了健康水平,母亲和后代的增量 QALY 分别增加了 0.04,表明其比常规护理具有优势。受益成本比表明,每花费 1 英镑,将产生 14 英镑(四分位距=8-20)的医疗保健储蓄中位数。
经济学视角下的孕期吸烟问题是第一个将母亲和婴儿的成本和效益联系起来并以易于比较的单位报告成本效益的经济模型。使用 ESIP 结合仅报告短期经济分析的试验数据表明,该干预措施在长期内极有可能具有成本效益,并产生医疗保健储蓄。