Health and Economic Impact of Periodic Hepatitis C Virus Testing Among People Who Inject Drugs.

IF 9.5 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Lin Zhu, Nathan W Furukawa, William W Thompson, Marissa B Reitsma, Liisa M Randall, Michelle Van Handel, Alice K Asher, Eduardo Valverde, Benjamin P Linas, Joshua A Salomon
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Importance: Periodic hepatitis C virus (HCV) testing is recommended for people who inject drugs (PWID), but the optimal testing frequency remains unknown.

Objective: To evaluate the health benefits, costs, and cost-effectiveness of alternative HCV testing frequencies for PWID.

Design, setting, and participants: This cost-effectiveness analysis extended a previously published agent-based network simulation model of HCV transmission through the sharing of injection equipment among PWID. Network-based HCV transmission was calibrated to longitudinal data from the Social Networks Among Appalachian People study and published literature on PWID networks in the US to evaluate HCV testing strategies in both a sparse PWID network setting with lower HCV transmission and a dense network setting with higher HCV transmission. Data were collected from November 2008 to August 2010, and data were analyzed from September 2017 to December 2019.

Exposures: Periodic HCV testing and treatment, with alternative average testing frequencies among PWID who have access to and use HCV care.

Main outcomes and measures: Changes in cumulative quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) and health care costs over 60 years (in 2021 US dollars) and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) discounted at 3% annually.

Results: The mean initial age of 1552 simulated PWID was 32 years. Compared with no testing, HCV testing and treatment among PWID over a 10-year intervention period increased QALYs by 2.5% to 4.6% and costs by 0.5% to 2.3% across average testing frequencies ranging from once every 2 years to once monthly. In a lower transmission setting, testing every 2 years was weakly dominated by more frequent testing strategies; testing every year, every 6 months, every 3 months, and every month had ICERs of $6000 per QALY, $9300 per QALY, $24 200 per QALY, and $138 400 per QALY, respectively. In a higher transmission setting, testing every 2 years and every year were both weakly dominated, while testing every 6 months, every 3 months, and every month had ICERs of $14 000 per QALY, $30 100 per QALY, and $93 300 per QALY, respectively. Results were sensitive to risks of primary infection and reinfection as well as access to and utilization of HCV testing services among PWID.

Conclusions and relevance: In this economic evaluation study, based on common benchmarks for cost-effectiveness, frequent HCV testing among PWID was cost-effective in both lower and higher transmission settings.

注射吸毒者定期丙型肝炎病毒检测对健康和经济的影响
重要性:建议对注射吸毒者(PWID)进行定期丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)检测,但最佳检测频率尚不清楚。目的:评估PWID的其他HCV检测频率的健康效益、成本和成本效益。设计、设置和参与者:这项成本效益分析扩展了先前发表的基于代理的HCV传播网络模拟模型,该模型通过在PWID之间共享注射设备进行传播。基于网络的HCV传播被校准为来自阿巴拉契亚人的社会网络研究和美国PWID网络的已发表文献的纵向数据,以评估在HCV传播较低的稀疏PWID网络环境和HCV传播较高的密集网络环境下的HCV检测策略。数据收集时间为2008年11月至2010年8月,分析时间为2017年9月至2019年12月。暴露情况:定期进行丙型肝炎病毒检测和治疗,在可获得和使用丙型肝炎病毒治疗的PWID患者中采用替代的平均检测频率。主要结局和措施:60年累计质量调整生命年(QALYs)和医疗保健成本的变化(以2021年美元计算)以及增量成本效益比(ICERs)以每年3%的折现率计算。结果:1552例模拟PWID的平均初始年龄为32岁。与没有检测相比,在10年的干预期内,PWID患者的HCV检测和治疗使QALYs增加了2.5%至4.6%,费用增加了0.5%至2.3%,平均检测频率从每2年一次到每月一次。在低传播环境中,每2年检测一次被更频繁的检测策略所微弱主导;每年、每6个月、每3个月和每个月的ICERs分别为每QALY 6000美元、每QALY 9300美元、每QALY 24 200美元和每QALY 138 400美元。在传播率较高的环境中,每2年和每年检测一次的ICERs都占微弱优势,而每6个月、每3个月和每月检测一次的ICERs分别为每QALY 14 000美元、每QALY 30 100美元和每QALY 93 300美元。结果对PWID患者的初次感染和再感染风险以及HCV检测服务的获取和利用情况敏感。结论和相关性:在这项经济评估研究中,基于成本效益的共同基准,在低传播和高传播环境中,对PWID患者进行频繁的HCV检测具有成本效益。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
7.80%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: JAMA Health Forum is an international, peer-reviewed, online, open access journal that addresses health policy and strategies affecting medicine, health, and health care. The journal publishes original research, evidence-based reports, and opinion about national and global health policy. It covers innovative approaches to health care delivery and health care economics, access, quality, safety, equity, and reform. In addition to publishing articles, JAMA Health Forum also features commentary from health policy leaders on the JAMA Forum. It covers news briefs on major reports released by government agencies, foundations, health policy think tanks, and other policy-focused organizations. JAMA Health Forum is a member of the JAMA Network, which is a consortium of peer-reviewed, general medical and specialty publications. The journal presents curated health policy content from across the JAMA Network, including journals such as JAMA and JAMA Internal Medicine.
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