Cost-effectiveness of antiviral stockpiling and near-patient testing for potential influenza pandemic.
A decision analytical model was developed to investigate the cost-effectiveness of stockpiling antiviral (AV) drugs for a potential influenza pandemic in the United Kingdom and the possible role of near-patient testing in conserving AV drug stocks. Under base-case assumptions (including a fixed stockpile that was smaller than the clinical attack rate), the treat-only option (treating all symptomatic patients with AV drugs) would be considered cost-effective ( pound1,900- pound13,700 per quality-adjusted life year [QALY] gained, depending on the fatality scenario), compared with no intervention (nonintervention but management of cases as they arise). The test-treat option (testing all symptomatic patients but treating those with positive tests results only) would result in moderate gains in QALYs over the treat-only option but at relatively large additional costs. Stockpiling sufficient AV drugs (but not near-patient tests) to treat all patients with clinical cases would be cost-effective, provided AV drugs are effective at preventing deaths from pandemic influenza.
Item Type | Article |
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Keywords | Antiviral Agents/economics/*supply & distribution/*therapeutic use, Cost-Benefit Analysis, *Decision Support Techniques, *Disease Outbreaks/prevention & control, Health Care Costs, Humans, Influenza, Human/drug therapy/economics/epidemiology/prevention & control, Quality-Adjusted Life Years, Sensitivity and Specificity, Antiviral Agents, economics, supply & distribution, therapeutic use, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Decision Support Techniques, Disease Outbreaks, prevention & control, Health Care Costs, Humans, Influenza, Human, drug therapy, economics, epidemiology, prevention & control, Quality-Adjusted Life Years, Sensitivity and Specificity |
ISI | 252969600011 |
Explore Further
- https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2600182 (OA Location)
- 10.3201/eid1402.070478 (DOI)
- 18258120 (PubMed)