The Lambe Institute for Translational Medicine, Smart Sensors Laboratory and Curam, University of Galway, Ireland.
Division of Cardiology, University Hospital of Verona, Verona, Italy.
Eur Heart J Qual Care Clin Outcomes. 2024 Jan 12;10(1):25-35. doi: 10.1093/ehjqcco/qcad025.
As a consequence of untimely or missed revascularization of ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) patients during the COVID-19 pandemic, many patients died at home or survived with serious sequelae, resulting in potential long-term worse prognosis and related health-economic implications.This analysis sought to predict long-term health outcomes [survival and quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs)] and cost of reduced treatment of STEMIs occurring during the first COVID-19 lockdown.
Using a Markov decision-analytic model, we incorporated probability of hospitalization, timeliness of PCI, and projected long-term survival and cost (including societal costs) of mortality and morbidity, for STEMI occurring during the first UK and Spanish lockdowns, comparing them with expected pre-lockdown outcomes for an equivalent patient group.STEMI patients during the first UK lockdown were predicted to lose an average of 1.55 life-years and 1.17 QALYs compared with patients presenting with a STEMI pre-pandemic. Based on an annual STEMI incidence of 49 332 cases, the total additional lifetime costs calculated at the population level were £36.6 million (€41.3 million), mainly driven by costs of work absenteeism. Similarly in Spain, STEMI patients during the lockdown were expected to survive 2.03 years less than pre-pandemic patients, with a corresponding reduction in projected QALYs (-1.63). At the population level, reduced PCI access would lead to additional costs of €88.6 million.
The effect of a 1-month lockdown on STEMI treatment led to a reduction in survival and QALYs compared to the pre-pandemic era. Moreover, in working-age patients, untimely revascularization led to adverse prognosis, affecting societal productivity and therefore considerably increasing societal costs.
由于 COVID-19 大流行期间 ST 段抬高型心肌梗死(STEMI)患者的血运重建不及时或错过血运重建时机,许多患者在家中死亡或幸存但留下严重后遗症,导致潜在的长期预后较差和相关的健康经济影响。本分析旨在预测 STEMI 治疗减少的长期健康结果(生存和质量调整生命年[QALYs])和成本,这些治疗减少发生在第一次 COVID-19 封锁期间。
使用马尔可夫决策分析模型,我们纳入了住院概率、PCI 的及时性以及发生在第一次英国和西班牙封锁期间的 STEMI 的长期生存和成本(包括社会成本)的预测,将其与等效患者群体的预期封锁前结果进行比较。与大流行前就诊的 STEMI 患者相比,第一次英国封锁期间的 STEMI 患者预计平均会失去 1.55 个生命年和 1.17 个 QALYs。基于每年 49332 例 STEMI 发病率,在人群层面计算的总额外终身成本为 3660 万英镑(4130 万欧元),主要由旷工成本驱动。在西班牙,封锁期间的 STEMI 患者预计比大流行前的患者少存活 2.03 年,相应的预计 QALYs 减少(-1.63)。在人群层面,PCI 通道减少将导致额外的 8860 万欧元成本。
与大流行前时期相比,1 个月的封锁对 STEMI 治疗的影响导致生存和 QALYs 减少。此外,在工作年龄患者中,血运重建不及时导致预后不良,影响社会生产力,从而大大增加社会成本。