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Optimizing diagnostic algorithms to advance Hepatitis C elimination in Italy: A cost effectiveness evaluation

Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2022
Citazione:
Optimizing diagnostic algorithms to advance Hepatitis C elimination in Italy: A cost effectiveness evaluation / Marcellusi, Andrea; Mennini, Francesco Saverio; Ruf, Murad; Galli, Claudio; Aghemo, Alessio; Brunetto, Maurizia R.; Babudieri, Sergio; Craxi, Antonio; Andreoni, Massimo; Kondili, Loreta A.. - In: LIVER INTERNATIONAL. - ISSN 1478-3223. - 42:1(2022), pp. 26-37. [10.1111/liv.15070]
Abstract:
Objectives: Optimized diagnostic algorithms to detect active infections are crucial to achieving HCV elimination. We evaluated the cost effectiveness and sustainability of different algorithms for HCV active infection diagnosis, in a context of a high endemic country for HCV infection. Methods: A Markov disease progression model, simulating six diagnostic algorithms in the birth cohort 1969-1989 over a 10-year horizon from a healthcare perspective was used. Conventionally diagnosis of active HCV infection is through detection of antibodies (HCV-Ab) detection followed by HCV-RNA or HCV core antigen (HCV-Ag) confirmatory testing either on a second sample or by same sample reflex testing. The undiagnosed and unconfirmed rates were evaluated by assays false negative estimates and each algorithm patients’ drop-off. Age, liver disease stages distribution, liver disease stage costs, treatment effectiveness and costs were used to evaluate the quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) and the incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICER). Results: The reference option was Rapid HCV-Ab followed by second sample HCV-Ag testing which produced the lowest QALYs (866,835 QALYs). The highest gains in health (QALYs=974,458) was obtained by HCV-RNA reflex testing which produced a high cost-effective ICER (€891/QALY). Reflex testing (same sample-single visit) vs two patients’ visits algorithms, yielded the highest QALYs and high cost-effective ICERs (€566 and €635/QALY for HCV-Ag and HCV-RNA, respectively), confirmed in 99.9% of the 5,000 probabilistic simulations. Conclusions: Our data confirm, by a cost effectiveness point of view, the EASL and WHO clinical practice guidelines recommending HCV reflex testing as most cost effective diagnostic option vs other diagnostic pathways.
Tipologia CRIS:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
HCV chronic infection; WHO targets; cost-effectiveness; screening
Elenco autori:
Marcellusi, Andrea; Mennini, Francesco Saverio; Ruf, Murad; Galli, Claudio; Aghemo, Alessio; Brunetto, Maurizia R.; Babudieri, Sergio; Craxi, Antonio; Andreoni, Massimo; Kondili, Loreta A.
Autori di Ateneo:
BABUDIERI Sergio
Link alla scheda completa:
https://iris.uniss.it/handle/11388/367809
Pubblicato in:
LIVER INTERNATIONAL
Journal
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