Institute of Health and Care Sciences, University of Gothenburg, Goteborg, Sweden
Centre for Person-Centred Care, University of Gothenburg, Goteborg, Sweden.
BMJ Open. 2022 Nov 24;12(11):e057864. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2021-057864.
To review and analyse evidence regarding costs for retinopathy of prematurity (ROP) screening, lifetime costs and resource use among infants born preterm who develop ROP, and how these costs have developed over time in different regions.
Systematic review and meta-analysis DATA SOURCES: PubMed and Scopus from inception to 23 June 2021.
Included studies presented costs for ROP screening and the lifetime costs (including laser treatment and follow-up costs) and resource use among people who develop ROP. Studies not reporting on cost calculation methods or ROP-specific costs were excluded.
Two independent reviewers screened for inclusion and extracted data, including items from a published checklist for quality assessment used for bias assessment, summary and random-effects meta-analysis for treatment costs. Included studies were further searched to identify eligible references and citations.
In total, 15 studies reported ROP screening costs, and 13 reported lifetime costs (either treatment and/or follow-up costs) for infants with ROP. The range for screening costs (10 studies) was US$5-US$253 per visit, or US$324-US$1072 per screened child (5 studies). Costs for treatment (11 studies) ranged from US$38 to US$6500 per child. Four studies reported healthcare follow-up costs (lifetime costs ranging from US$64 to US$2420, and 10-year costs of US$1695, respectively), and of these, three also reported lifetime costs for blindness (range US$26 686-US$224 295) using secondary cost data. Included papers largely followed the quality assessment checklist items, thus indicating a low risk of bias.
The costs of screening for and treating ROP are small compared with the societal costs of resulting blindness. However, little evidence is available for predicting the effects of changes in patient population, screening schedule or ROP treatments.
CRD42020208213.
回顾和分析早产儿视网膜病变(ROP)筛查的成本、ROP 患儿终生成本和资源利用的证据,以及不同地区这些成本随时间的变化情况。
系统综述和荟萃分析。
PubMed 和 Scopus 从创建到 2021 年 6 月 23 日。
纳入研究报告了 ROP 筛查的成本,以及 ROP 患儿的终生成本(包括激光治疗和随访成本)和资源利用。未报告成本计算方法或 ROP 特异性成本的研究被排除在外。
两名独立的审查员筛选纳入的研究并提取数据,包括用于偏倚评估的已发表清单中的项目、治疗成本的汇总和随机效应荟萃分析。纳入的研究还进一步搜索以确定合格的参考文献和引文。
共有 15 项研究报告了 ROP 筛查成本,13 项研究报告了 ROP 患儿的终生成本(治疗和/或随访成本)。筛查成本的范围(10 项研究)为每次就诊 5 至 253 美元,或每筛查一名儿童 324 至 1072 美元(5 项研究)。治疗成本(11 项研究)范围为每个儿童 38 至 6500 美元。四项研究报告了医疗保健随访成本(终生成本范围为 64 至 2420 美元,10 年成本为 1695 美元),其中三项还报告了使用次要成本数据的失明终生成本(范围为 26686 至 224295 美元)。纳入的论文在很大程度上遵循了质量评估清单项目,因此表明偏倚风险较低。
与失明造成的社会成本相比,ROP 筛查和治疗的成本很小。然而,几乎没有证据可以预测患者人群、筛查计划或 ROP 治疗变化的影响。
PROSPERO 注册号:CRD42020208213。