Cost and cost-effectiveness of tuberculosis treatment shortening: a model-based analysis
Journal Article
2016
Permanent link to this Item
Authors
Journal Title
BMC Infectious Diseases
Link to Journal
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Publisher
Faculty
License
Series
Abstract
Background Despite improvements in treatment success rates for tuberculosis (TB), current six-month regimen duration remains a challenge for many National TB Programmes, health systems, and patients. There is increasing investment in the development of shortened regimens with a number of candidates in phase 3 trials. Methods We developed an individual-based decision analytic model to assess the cost-effectiveness of a hypothetical four-month regimen for first-line treatment of TB, assuming non-inferiority to current regimens of six-month duration. The model was populated using extensive, empirically-collected data to estimate the economic impact on both health systems and patients of regimen shortening for first-line TB treatment in South Africa, Brazil, Bangladesh, and Tanzania. We explicitly considered ‘real world’ constraints such as sub-optimal guideline adherence. Results From a societal perspective, a shortened regimen, priced at USD1 per day, could be a cost-saving option in South Africa, Brazil, and Tanzania, but would not be cost-effective in Bangladesh when compared to one gross domestic product (GDP) per capita. Incorporating ‘real world’ constraints reduces cost-effectiveness. Patient-incurred costs could be reduced in all settings. From a health service perspective, increased drug costs need to be balanced against decreased delivery costs. The new regimen would remain a cost-effective option, when compared to each countries’ GDP per capita, even if new drugs cost up to USD7.5 and USD53.8 per day in South Africa and Brazil; this threshold was above USD1 in Tanzania and under USD1 in Bangladesh. Conclusion Reducing the duration of first-line TB treatment has the potential for substantial economic gains from a patient perspective. The potential economic gains for health services may also be important, but will be context-specific and dependent on the appropriate pricing of any new regimen.
Description
Keywords
Reference:
Gomez, G.B., Dowdy, D.W., Bastos, M.L., Zwerling, A., Sweeney, S., Foster, N., Trajman, A. & Islam, M.A. et al. 2016. Cost and cost-effectiveness of tuberculosis treatment shortening: a model-based analysis. BMC Infectious Diseases. 16(1):174 - 177. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/34282