Cost-effectiveness of molecular point-of-care testing for influenza viruses in elderly patients at ambulatory care setting.

Early initiation of antiviral therapy in elderly patients with influenza is associated with reduced risk of extra clinic visit, hospitalization and death. This study examined the cost-effectiveness of molecular POCT for detection of influenza viruses in Hong Kong elderly patients with influenza-like...

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Main Authors: Joyce H S You, Lok-Pui Tam, Nelson L S Lee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5531460?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-943a545c6c2d45909d9bdd8704a9dd002020-11-25T00:26:49ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01127e018209110.1371/journal.pone.0182091Cost-effectiveness of molecular point-of-care testing for influenza viruses in elderly patients at ambulatory care setting.Joyce H S YouLok-Pui TamNelson L S LeeEarly initiation of antiviral therapy in elderly patients with influenza is associated with reduced risk of extra clinic visit, hospitalization and death. This study examined the cost-effectiveness of molecular POCT for detection of influenza viruses in Hong Kong elderly patients with influenza-like illness (ILI) in the outpatient clinics.A decision analytic model was used to simulate outcomes of a hypothetical cohort of elderly patients presented with ILI at outpatient clinics during peak season of influenza with two diagnostic approaches: Rapid molecular assay (POCT-PCR group) and clinical judgement with no POCT. Outcome measures included influenza-associated direct medical cost, hospitalization and mortality rates, quality-adjusted life year loss (QALY loss), and incremental cost per QALY saved (ICER).In base-case analysis, POCT-PCR group was expected to reduce hospitalization (1.38% versus 2.85%) and mortality rate (0.08% versus 0.16%) and save 0.00112 QALYs at higher cost (by USD33.2 per ILI patient), comparing with clinical judgement group. The ICER of POCT-PCR was 29,582 USD/QALY saved. One-way sensitivity analyses found ICER sensitive to: Hospitalization rate without prompt antiviral therapy; odds ratio of hospitalization with prompt therapy; influenza prevalence; patient age and mortality rate of hospitalized patients. POCT-PCR was cost-effective in 60.6% and 99.4% of 10,000 Monte Carlo simulations at willingness-to-pay threshold of 1x and 3x gross domestic product per capita of Hong Kong, respectively.Molecular POCT for influenza detection in elderly patients with ILI at outpatient clinics during peak influenza season appeared to be cost-effective in Hong Kong.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5531460?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joyce H S You
Lok-Pui Tam
Nelson L S Lee
spellingShingle Joyce H S You
Lok-Pui Tam
Nelson L S Lee
Cost-effectiveness of molecular point-of-care testing for influenza viruses in elderly patients at ambulatory care setting.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Joyce H S You
Lok-Pui Tam
Nelson L S Lee
author_sort Joyce H S You
title Cost-effectiveness of molecular point-of-care testing for influenza viruses in elderly patients at ambulatory care setting.
title_short Cost-effectiveness of molecular point-of-care testing for influenza viruses in elderly patients at ambulatory care setting.
title_full Cost-effectiveness of molecular point-of-care testing for influenza viruses in elderly patients at ambulatory care setting.
title_fullStr Cost-effectiveness of molecular point-of-care testing for influenza viruses in elderly patients at ambulatory care setting.
title_full_unstemmed Cost-effectiveness of molecular point-of-care testing for influenza viruses in elderly patients at ambulatory care setting.
title_sort cost-effectiveness of molecular point-of-care testing for influenza viruses in elderly patients at ambulatory care setting.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Early initiation of antiviral therapy in elderly patients with influenza is associated with reduced risk of extra clinic visit, hospitalization and death. This study examined the cost-effectiveness of molecular POCT for detection of influenza viruses in Hong Kong elderly patients with influenza-like illness (ILI) in the outpatient clinics.A decision analytic model was used to simulate outcomes of a hypothetical cohort of elderly patients presented with ILI at outpatient clinics during peak season of influenza with two diagnostic approaches: Rapid molecular assay (POCT-PCR group) and clinical judgement with no POCT. Outcome measures included influenza-associated direct medical cost, hospitalization and mortality rates, quality-adjusted life year loss (QALY loss), and incremental cost per QALY saved (ICER).In base-case analysis, POCT-PCR group was expected to reduce hospitalization (1.38% versus 2.85%) and mortality rate (0.08% versus 0.16%) and save 0.00112 QALYs at higher cost (by USD33.2 per ILI patient), comparing with clinical judgement group. The ICER of POCT-PCR was 29,582 USD/QALY saved. One-way sensitivity analyses found ICER sensitive to: Hospitalization rate without prompt antiviral therapy; odds ratio of hospitalization with prompt therapy; influenza prevalence; patient age and mortality rate of hospitalized patients. POCT-PCR was cost-effective in 60.6% and 99.4% of 10,000 Monte Carlo simulations at willingness-to-pay threshold of 1x and 3x gross domestic product per capita of Hong Kong, respectively.Molecular POCT for influenza detection in elderly patients with ILI at outpatient clinics during peak influenza season appeared to be cost-effective in Hong Kong.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5531460?pdf=render
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