Modelling the potential clinical and economic impact of universal antenatal hepatitis C (HCV) screening and providing treatment for pregnant women with HCV and their infants in Egypt: a cost-effectiveness study

N. Hachicha-Maalej, Clotilde Lepers, I. Collins, Aya Mostafa, Anthony E Ades, Ali Judd, Karen Scott, Diana Gibb, Sarah Pett, Giuseppe Indolfi, Y. Yazdanpanah, Manal H El Sayed, S. Deuffic-Burban
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Abstract

Pregnant women and children are not included in Egypt’s hepatitis C virus (HCV) elimination programmes. This study assesses the cost-effectiveness of several screening and treatment strategies for pregnant women and infants in Egypt.A Markov model was developed to simulate the cascade of care and HCV disease progression among pregnant women and their infants according to different screening and treatment strategies, which included: targeted versus universal antenatal screening; treatment of women in pregnancy or deferred till after breast feeding; treatment of infected children at 3 years vs 12 years. Current practice is targeted antenatal screening with deferred treatment for the mother and child. We also explored prophylactic treatment after birth for children of diagnosed HCV-infected women. Discounted lifetime cost, life expectancy (LE) and disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) were calculated separately for women and their infants, and then combined.Current practice led to the highest cost (US$314.0), the lowest LE (46.3348 years) and the highest DALYs (0.0512 years) per mother–child pair. Universal screening and treatment during pregnancy followed by treatment of children at 3 years would be less expensive and more effective (cost saving) compared with current practice (US$219.3, 46.3525 and 0.0359 years). Prophylactic treatment at birth for infants born to HCV RNA-positive mothers would also be similarly cost saving, even with treatment uptake as low as 15% (US$218.6, 46.3525 and 0.0359 years). Findings were robust to reasonable changes in parameters.Universal screening and treatment of HCV in pregnancy, with treatment of infected infants at age 3 years is cost saving compared with current practice in the Egyptian setting.
为埃及普及产前丙型肝炎(HCV)筛查并为感染 HCV 的孕妇及其婴儿提供治疗的潜在临床和经济影响建模:成本效益研究
孕妇和儿童未被纳入埃及的丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)消除计划。这项研究评估了埃及孕妇和婴儿筛查和治疗策略的成本效益。研究人员开发了一个马尔可夫模型,根据不同的筛查和治疗策略模拟孕妇及其婴儿的护理和丙型肝炎病毒疾病进展情况,这些策略包括:产前筛查的针对性与普遍性;对孕期妇女的治疗或推迟到哺乳期后;对感染儿童的 3 岁治疗与 12 岁治疗。目前的做法是进行有针对性的产前筛查,同时推迟对母亲和儿童的治疗。我们还探讨了已确诊感染 HCV 的妇女所生子女出生后的预防性治疗。我们分别计算了妇女及其婴儿的贴现终生成本、预期寿命和残疾调整寿命年数,然后进行了合并计算。与目前的做法相比,在孕期进行普遍筛查和治疗,然后在儿童 3 岁时进行治疗,成本更低,效果更好(节省成本)(219.3 美元、46.3525 年和 0.0359 年)。对于 HCV RNA 阳性母亲所生的婴儿,在出生时进行预防性治疗也同样可以节约成本,即使治疗率低至 15%(218.6 美元、46.3525 和 0.0359 年)。与埃及目前的做法相比,在妊娠期普遍筛查和治疗 HCV,并在受感染婴儿 3 岁时进行治疗可节约成本。
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