Li Xiao, Bilcke Joke, Asare Ernest O, Wenger Catherine, Kwon Jiye, Bont Louis, Beutels Philippe, Pitzer Virginia E
Public Health Modeling Unit, Yale School of Public Health, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, USA
Department of Epidemiology of Microbial Diseases, Yale School of Public Health, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, USA.
BMJ Glob Health. 2025 Aug 24;10(8):e016784. doi: 10.1136/bmjgh-2024-016784.
Non-disease-specific WHO-CHOICE (CHOosing Interventions that are Cost-Effective) unit costs are often used in cost and cost-effectiveness studies in the absence of country-specific data. This study aims to compare reported country-specific disease costs and the corresponding WHO-CHOICE estimates, using generically defined 'diarrhoea' (including rotavirus diarrhoea) and pathogen-specific 'respiratory syncytial virus (RSV)' disease in children as examples.
We updated systematic reviews for both diseases in low-income (LICs), lower middle-income (LMICs) and upper middle-income (UMICs) countries. Diarrhoeal (including a subanalysis of rotavirus-specific diarrhoea) and RSV-specific outpatient and inpatient costs per episode in children were extracted and compared with WHO-CHOICE estimates in the same countries. All costs were updated to 2022 international dollar values. If a consistent pattern of underestimation or overestimation was identified, we quantified the magnitude of the discrepancy as the ratio of published disease-specific costs and corresponding WHO-CHOICE-based estimates.
Out of 1979 records identified, 23 cost studies were included. Including previous reviews, we retained 31 diarrhoea and 16 RSV studies for comparison. WHO-CHOICE-based direct medical costs were similar for diarrhoeal disease (including rotavirus diarrhoea), but lower for RSV-related disease. We estimated the cost per episode of diarrhoea and RSV in 128 countries. RSV outpatient costs were adjusted by multiplying WHO-CHOICE costs by 6.89 (95% uncertainty interval: 5.58 to 8.58) in LICs and LMICs and 5.87 (4.95 to 6.96) in UMICs; RSV inpatient costs were multiplied by 1.43 (1.01 to 2.01) and 1.36 (0.82 to 2.27), respectively.
While informative for economic evaluations, WHO-CHOICE-based cost estimates should be used cautiously. Our analysis shows they aligned well with empirical studies for diarrhoeal disease but underestimated the costs of RSV-related disease. For diseases with few country-specific costing studies, comparing findings of the empirical studies with WHO-CHOICE estimates is crucial before conducting economic evaluations for countries without data. We propose a simple approach for calculating adjustment factors for WHO-CHOICE estimates when empirical data on disease-specific diagnosis and treatment costs are limited.
在缺乏特定国家数据的情况下,非疾病特异性的世界卫生组织成本效益干预选择(WHO-CHOICE)单位成本常被用于成本和成本效益研究。本研究旨在以儿童中一般定义的“腹泻”(包括轮状病毒腹泻)和病原体特异性的“呼吸道合胞病毒(RSV)”疾病为例,比较已报告的特定国家疾病成本与相应的WHO-CHOICE估计值。
我们更新了低收入国家(LICs)、中低收入国家(LMICs)和中高收入国家(UMICs)这两种疾病的系统评价。提取了儿童腹泻(包括轮状病毒特异性腹泻的亚分析)和RSV特异性门诊及住院每次发作的成本,并与同一国家的WHO-CHOICE估计值进行比较。所有成本均更新为2022年国际美元价值。如果发现一致的低估或高估模式,我们将差异幅度量化为已发表的疾病特异性成本与相应的基于WHO-CHOICE的估计值之比。
在识别出的1979条记录中,纳入了23项成本研究。包括之前的综述,我们保留了31项腹泻研究和16项RSV研究用于比较。基于WHO-CHOICE的腹泻病(包括轮状病毒腹泻)直接医疗成本相似,但RSV相关疾病的成本较低。我们估计了128个国家腹泻和RSV每次发作的成本。在低收入和中低收入国家,RSV门诊成本通过将WHO-CHOICE成本乘以6.89(95%不确定区间:5.58至8.58)进行调整,在中高收入国家则乘以5.87(4.95至6.96);RSV住院成本分别乘以1.43(范围1.01至2.01)和1.36(范围0.82至2.27)。
虽然基于WHO-CHOICE的成本估计对经济评估有参考价值,但应谨慎使用。我们的分析表明,它们与腹泻病的实证研究结果吻合良好,但低估了RSV相关疾病的成本。对于特定国家成本研究较少的疾病,在对无数据国家进行经济评估之前,将实证研究结果与WHO-CHOICE估计值进行比较至关重要。我们提出了一种简单方法,在疾病特异性诊断和治疗成本的实证数据有限时,用于计算WHO-CHOICE估计值的调整因子。