估计加拿大肺癌诊断和治疗的费用:POHEM模型。

The Canadian journal of oncology Pub Date : 1995-12-01
W K Evans, B P Will, J M Berthelot, M C Wolfson
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引用次数: 0

摘要

由于肺癌是加拿大的一个主要保健问题,确定诊断和治疗这种疾病的直接保健费用并建立一个分析框架是有益的,在这个框架内可以评估诊断和治疗方案。本文描述了一种模拟肺癌治疗费用的方法。成本模型的视角是政府作为全民医疗保健系统的支付者。临床算法被开发来描述非小细胞(NSCLC)和小细胞(SCLC)肺癌的管理。根据肺癌专家的说法,患者被分配到模型中的治疗算法中,这是基于对省级癌症登记处病例阶段分布的了解和对治疗方式使用的估计。使用加拿大统计局开发的微观模拟模型(POHEM)来整合有关风险因素、疾病发生和进展、保健资源利用和直接医疗费用的数据。该模型根据已发表的研究,根据细胞类型和分期纳入了患者的生存数据。在死亡年度内分配复发和终末期护理费用,以确定持续护理费用和随时间推移肺癌管理的累积费用。存活5年的患者被认为已经治愈。该模型估计,1988年加拿大诊断出的15,624例肺癌患者的五年护理费用总计超过3.28亿美元。其中82%以上用于第一年的诊断测试、治疗(手术、化疗、放射治疗或这些治疗的组合)、住院和后续费用。每个病例的平均5年费用为21,000美元,从有限疾病SCLC的29,860美元到IV期NSCLC的16,500美元不等。提供护理的实际成本,包括并发症的管理,是未知的,我们的估计应被视为肺癌管理成本的理想估计。然而,POHEM模型具有一定的复杂性,我们认为,它合理地反映了加拿大按分期和治疗方式治疗肺癌的每例成本和总成本。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Estimating the cost of lung cancer diagnosis and treatment in Canada: the POHEM model.

Because lung cancer is a major health care problem in Canada, it would be useful to identify the direct health care costs of diagnosing and treating this disease and to create an analytic framework within which diagnostic and therapeutic options can be assessed. This paper describes a method of modelling the costs of care for lung cancer. The perspective of the costing model is that of the government as payer in a universal health care system. Clinical algorithms were developed to describe the management of non-small cell (NSCLC) and small cell (SCLC) lung cancer. Patients were allocated to the treatment algorithms in the model, based on a knowledge of the stage distribution of cases within provincial cancer registries and an estimate of the use of therapeutic modalities, according to lung cancer experts. A microsimulation model (POHEM) developed at Statistics Canada was used to integrate data on risk factors, disease onset and progression, health care resource utilization and direct medical care costs. The model incorporates survival data on patients, according to cell type and stage, based on published studies. Relapse and terminal care costs were assigned during the year of death, in order to determine the cost of continuing care and the cumulative cost of lung cancer management over time. Patients surviving five years were assumed to be cured. The model estimates that the total five year cost to provide care to the 15,624 cases of lung cancer diagnosed in Canada in 1988 was in excess of $328 million. Over 82% of this total was spent in the first year for diagnostic tests, therapy (surgery, chemotherapy, radiation therapy, or combinations of these), hospitalization and follow-up costs. The average five year cost per case was $21,000, and ranged from a high of $29,860 for limited disease SCLC, to a low of $16,500 for Stage IV NSCLC. The actual cost of providing care, including the management of complications, is unknown and our estimates should be regarded as an idealized estimate of the cost of lung cancer management. However, the POHEM model has a level of sophistication which, we believe, reasonably reflects the cost per case and total costs of treating lung cancer by stage and therapeutic modality in Canada.

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