Palmer Anna Y, Wade Amanda J, Draper Bridget, Howell Jessica, Doyle Joseph S, Petrie Dennis, Thompson Alexander J, Wilson David P, Hellard Margaret E, Scott Nick
Disease Elimination Program, Burnet Institute, 85 Commercial Road, Melbourne, VIC 3004, Australia.
Disease Elimination Program, Burnet Institute, 85 Commercial Road, Melbourne, VIC 3004, Australia; Department of Infectious Diseases, Barwon Health, Geelong, Victoria, Australia.
Int J Drug Policy. 2020 Feb;76:102633. doi: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2019.102633. Epub 2019 Dec 20.
Hepatitis C virus elimination may be possible by scaling up direct-acting antiviral (DAA) treatment. Due to the safety and simplicity of DAA treatment, primary care-based treatment delivery is now feasible, efficacious and may be cheaper than hospital-based specialist care. In this paper, we use Prime Study data - a randomised controlled trial comparing the uptake of DAA treatment between primary and hospital-based care settings amongst people who inject drugs (PWID) - to estimate the cost of initiating treatment for PWID diagnosed with hepatitis C in primary care compared to hospital-based care.
The total economic costs associated with delivering DAA treatment (post hepatitis C diagnosis) within the Prime study - including health provider time/training, medical tests, equipment, logistics and pharmacy costs - were collected. Appointment data were used to estimate the number/type of appointments required to initiate treatment in each case, or the stage at which loss to follow up occurred.
Among the hepatitis C patients randomised to be treated within primary care, 43/57 (75%) commenced treatment at a mean cost of A$885 (95% CI: A$850-938) per patient initiating treatment. In hospital-based care, 18/53 hepatitis C patients (34%) commenced treatment at a mean cost of A$2078 (range: A$2052-2394) per patient initiating treatment - more than twice as high as primary care. The lower cost in the primary care arm was predominantly the result of increased retention in care compared to the hospital-based arm.
Compared to hospital-based care, providing hepatitis C services for PWID in primary care can improve treatment uptake and approximately halve the average cost of treatment initiation. To improve treatment uptake and cure, countries should consider primary care as the main model for hepatitis C treatment scale-up.
扩大直接抗病毒药物(DAA)治疗可能实现丙型肝炎病毒的消除。由于DAA治疗的安全性和简便性,基于初级保健的治疗提供现在是可行、有效的,并且可能比基于医院的专科护理更便宜。在本文中,我们使用Prime研究数据——一项比较初级保健和基于医院的护理环境中注射毒品者(PWID)接受DAA治疗情况的随机对照试验——来估计与基于医院的护理相比,在初级保健中为诊断为丙型肝炎的PWID启动治疗的成本。
收集了Prime研究中与提供DAA治疗(丙型肝炎诊断后)相关的总经济成本,包括医疗服务提供者的时间/培训、医学检查、设备、物流和药房成本。预约数据用于估计每种情况下启动治疗所需的预约数量/类型,或失访发生的阶段。
在随机分配到初级保健中接受治疗的丙型肝炎患者中,43/57(75%)开始治疗,每位启动治疗的患者平均成本为885澳元(95%置信区间:850澳元-938澳元)。在基于医院的护理中,18/53名丙型肝炎患者(34%)开始治疗,每位启动治疗的患者平均成本为2078澳元(范围:2052澳元-2394澳元),是初级保健的两倍多。初级保健组成本较低主要是因为与基于医院的组相比,护理保留率提高。
与基于医院的护理相比,在初级保健中为PWID提供丙型肝炎服务可以提高治疗接受率,并使启动治疗的平均成本降低约一半。为了提高治疗接受率和治愈率,各国应考虑将初级保健作为扩大丙型肝炎治疗的主要模式。