Department of Sports and Sport Science, Sport Psychology, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany.
Department of Rehabilitation Psychology and Psychotherapy, Institute of Psychology, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany.
BMJ Open. 2019 Apr 9;9(4):e023390. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-023390.
This study aims at evaluating the cost-effectiveness and cost-utility of a guided and unguided internet-based intervention for chronic pain patients (ACTonPain and ACTonPain) compared with a waitlist control group (CG) as well as the comparative cost-effectiveness of the guided and the unguided version.
This is a health economic evaluation alongside a three-arm randomised controlled trial from a societal perspective. Assessments were conducted at baseline, 9 weeks and 6 months after randomisation.
Participants were recruited through online and offline strategies and in collaboration with a health insurance company.
302 adults (≥18 years, pain for at least 6 months) were randomly allocated to one of the three groups (ACTonPain, ACTonPain, CG).
ACTonPain consists of seven modules and is based on Acceptance and Commitment Therapy. ACTonPain and ACTonPain only differ in provision of human support.
Main outcomes of the cost-effectiveness and the cost-utility analyses were meaningful change in pain interference (treatment response) and quality-adjusted life years (QALYs), respectively. Economic evaluation estimates were the incremental cost-effectiveness and cost-utility ratio (ICER/ICUR).
At 6-month follow-up, treatment response and QALYs were highest in ACTonPain (44% and 0.280; mean costs = €6,945), followed by ACTonPain (28% and 0.266; mean costs = €6,560) and the CG (16% and 0.244; mean costs = €6,908). ACTonPain vs CG revealed an ICER of €45 and an ICUR of €604.ACTonPain dominated CG. At a willingness-to-pay of €0 the probability of being cost-effective was 50% for ACTonPain (vs CG, for both treatment response and QALY gained) and 67% for ACTonPain (vs CG, for both treatment response and QALY gained). These probabilities rose to 95% when society's willingness-to-pay is €91,000 (ACTonPain) and €127,000 (ACTonPain) per QALY gained. ACTonPain vs ACTonPain revealed an ICER of €2,374 and an ICUR of €45,993.
Depending on society's willingness-to-pay, ACTonPain is a potentially cost-effective adjunct to established pain treatment. ACTonPain (vs CG) revealed lower costs at better health outcomes. However, uncertainty has to be considered. Direct comparison of the two interventions does not indicate a preference for ACTonPain.
DRKS00006183.
本研究旨在评估一种基于互联网的慢性疼痛患者的指导和非指导干预(ACTonPain 和 ACTonPain)与等待对照组(CG)相比的成本效益和成本效用,并比较指导和非指导版本的相对成本效益。
这是一项从社会角度出发的三臂随机对照试验的健康经济学评价。评估在随机分组后 9 周和 6 个月进行。
通过在线和离线策略以及与一家健康保险公司合作招募参与者。
302 名成年人(≥18 岁,疼痛至少 6 个月)被随机分配到三组之一(ACTonPain、ACTonPain、CG)。
ACTonPain 由七个模块组成,基于接受和承诺疗法。ACTonPain 和 ACTonPain 仅在提供人工支持方面有所不同。
成本效益和成本效用分析的主要结果分别是疼痛干扰(治疗反应)和质量调整生命年(QALYs)的有意义变化。经济评估估计值是增量成本效益比(ICER/ICUR)。
在 6 个月的随访中,ACTonPain 的治疗反应和 QALYs 最高(44%和 0.280;平均费用=€6945),其次是 ACTonPain(28%和 0.266;平均费用=€6560)和 CG(16%和 0.244;平均费用=€6908)。ACTonPain 与 CG 相比,ICER 为 €45,ICUR 为 €604。ACTonPain 优于 CG。在支付意愿为€0 时,ACTonPain 的成本效益概率为 50%(与 CG 相比,治疗反应和 QALY 均有获益),ACTonPain 的概率为 67%(与 CG 相比,治疗反应和 QALY 均有获益)。当社会的支付意愿为€91000(ACTonPain)和€127000(ACTonPain)时,这些概率分别上升至 95%,每获得一个 QALY。ACTonPain 与 ACTonPain 相比,ICER 为 €2374,ICUR 为 €45993。
根据社会的支付意愿,ACTonPain 可能是一种附加于现有疼痛治疗的成本效益方法。ACTonPain(与 CG 相比)在获得更好的健康结果时降低了成本。然而,必须考虑到不确定性。直接比较这两种干预措施并不能表明对 ACTonPain 的偏好。
DRKS00006183。