Peel J K, Keshavjee S, Krahn M, Sander B
Department of Anesthesiology & Pain Medicine, University of Toronto, ON, Canada; Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, University of Toronto, ON, Canada; Toronto Health Economics and Technology Assessment Collaborative, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Division of Thoracic Surgery, Toronto General Hospital, University Health Network, ON, Canada; Toronto General Hospital Research Institute, University Health Network, Toronto, ON, Canada.
J Heart Lung Transplant. 2021 Dec;40(12):1625-1640. doi: 10.1016/j.healun.2021.08.007. Epub 2021 Aug 26.
Evaluation of the joint clinical and economic impacts of lung transplant and associated technologies is crucial for evidence-informed decision-making and wise allocation of scarce healthcare resources. We performed a scoping review to summarize and categorize the available evidence of the costs and cost-effectiveness of lung transplantation.
A systematic search of MEDLINE, EMBASE, NHS EED, and EconLit was performed to identify studies involving lung transplantation for adults that measured costs, cost-effectiveness, or which described themselves as economic evaluations. A scoping review was performed in adherence to the framework described by Arksey & O'Malley. Risk of bias was assessed in included studies using the ECOBIAS and CHEC-list tools.
In total, 324 studies were identified, of which 28 met inclusion criteria. Cost-utility estimates of lung transplant versus waitlist, from the healthcare payer perspective and a time-horizon of at least 10-years ranged between $42,459 and $154,051 per quality-adjusted life year. Common topics of study included lung transplant versus waitlist care, immunosuppression, organ retrieval and allocation, and mechanical life support.
Sources of variation in costs-assessments and economic evaluations included differences in the type of study performed, payer perspective adopted, study time horizon, and variation in clinical practice. The best available cost-utility estimates for lung transplant versus waitlist may represent cost-effectiveness under some circumstances, but high-quality evidence is lacking. Further cost-utility analyses, with sufficient methodologic rigour, are required to overcome the observed variation in results and confirm cost-effectiveness of the current standard of care in lung transplantation.
评估肺移植及相关技术的联合临床和经济影响对于基于证据的决策以及稀缺医疗资源的合理分配至关重要。我们进行了一项范围综述,以总结和分类肺移植成本及成本效益的现有证据。
对MEDLINE、EMBASE、NHS EED和EconLit进行系统检索,以识别涉及成人肺移植的研究,这些研究测量了成本、成本效益,或描述自己为经济评估。按照Arksey和O'Malley描述的框架进行范围综述。使用ECOBIAS和CHEC清单工具对纳入研究的偏倚风险进行评估。
共识别出324项研究,其中28项符合纳入标准。从医疗保健支付方的角度以及至少10年的时间跨度来看,肺移植与等待名单相比的成本效用估计为每质量调整生命年42,459美元至154,051美元。常见的研究主题包括肺移植与等待名单护理、免疫抑制、器官获取与分配以及机械生命支持。
成本评估和经济评估中的差异来源包括所进行研究的类型、采用的支付方视角、研究时间跨度以及临床实践的差异。肺移植与等待名单相比的最佳可用成本效用估计在某些情况下可能代表成本效益,但缺乏高质量证据。需要进行更具方法学严谨性的进一步成本效用分析,以克服观察到的结果差异,并确认肺移植当前护理标准的成本效益。