Rajasingham Radha, Pollock Nira R, Linas Benjamin P
Division of Infectious Diseases, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts.
Division of Infectious Diseases and International Medicine, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Open Forum Infect Dis. 2017 Sep 8;4(4):ofx194. doi: 10.1093/ofid/ofx194. eCollection 2017 Fall.
Persons with HIV and tuberculosis (TB) co-infection require transaminase monitoring while on hepatotoxic medications. A novel paper-based, point-of-care transaminase test is in development at an anticipated cost of $1 per test.
To project long-term clinical outcomes and estimate the cost-effectiveness of using a paper-based fingerstick test to monitor for drug-induced liver injury (DILI), as compared with automated testing and with no laboratory monitoring. The design was a decision analytic model, including deterministic and probabilistic sensitivity analyses. Data sources were observational cohorts and a validation study of the paper-based test. The target population was HIV/TB co-infected persons in South Africa on antiretroviral therapy who were initiating TB therapy. Interventions: (1) clinical (no laboratory) monitoring; (2) monitoring using the paper-based test with a ≥120 IU/mL threshold for positivity; (3) monitoring using the paper-based test with a ≥200 IU/mL threshold for positivity; (4) monitoring using the paper-based test using 1 of 3 categories: <120 IU/mL, 120 to 200 IU/mL, and >200 IU/mL ("bin placement"); (5) monitoring using automated ALT testing using the same 3 categories ("automated testing"). The outcome measures were discounted quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs), costs, and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs).
The ICER of automated testing was $5180/QALY. Use of the paper-based test with the bin placement strategy was cost-effective compared with clinical monitoring alone.
At its current performance, monthly DILI monitoring by bin placement using the paper-based test was cost-effective, compared with clinical monitoring, in HIV/TB co-infected persons in South Africa.
合并感染艾滋病毒和结核病(TB)的患者在使用肝毒性药物时需要监测转氨酶。一种新型的基于纸的即时检测转氨酶测试正在研发中,预计每次检测成本为1美元。
预测长期临床结果,并估计与自动检测和不进行实验室监测相比,使用基于纸的指尖检测来监测药物性肝损伤(DILI)的成本效益。设计为决策分析模型,包括确定性和概率敏感性分析。数据来源为观察性队列和基于纸的检测的验证研究。目标人群是南非接受抗逆转录病毒治疗且开始结核病治疗的艾滋病毒/结核病合并感染患者。干预措施:(1)临床(无实验室)监测;(2)使用基于纸的检测进行监测,阳性阈值≥120 IU/mL;(3)使用基于纸的检测进行监测,阳性阈值≥200 IU/mL;(4)使用基于纸的检测进行监测,分为以下3类之一:<120 IU/mL、120至200 IU/mL和>200 IU/mL(“分箱放置”);(5)使用自动ALT检测进行监测,分为相同的3类(“自动检测”)。结果指标为贴现质量调整生命年(QALY)、成本和增量成本效益比(ICER)。
自动检测的ICER为5180美元/QALY。与仅进行临床监测相比,采用分箱放置策略的基于纸的检测具有成本效益。
就目前的性能而言,在南非艾滋病毒/结核病合并感染患者中,与临床监测相比,每月使用基于纸的检测通过分箱放置进行DILI监测具有成本效益。