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The Economics of Hepatitis B Virus VaccinationAn Analysis of Cost-Effectiveness Results for Switzerland

 

作者: Pascal Zurn,   Guy Carrin,   Jean-Pierre Danthine,   Raoul Kammerlander,   Mark Kane,  

 

期刊: Disease Management & Health Outcomes  (ADIS Available online 2000)
卷期: Volume 7, issue 6  

页码: 331-347

 

ISSN:1173-8790

 

年代: 2000

 

出版商: ADIS

 

关键词: Adolescents;Children;Cost effectiveness;Hepatitis B, prevention;Hepatitis B vaccine, therapeutic use;Infants;Neonates;Pharmacoeconomics;Vaccines, therapeutic use

 

数据来源: ADIS

 

摘要:

ObjectiveTo assess and compare the costs and effectiveness of different vaccination strategies against hepatitis B in Switzerland.DesignA birth cohort of 85 000 individuals was followed over their lifetime, using a decision-tree analysis. Published data were used to simulate the risk of hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection in the cohort, the consecutive clinical outcomes and the associated costs. Five new vaccination scenarios were assessed and compared with a baseline strategy of vaccination of high-risk groups. The 5 new vaccination scenarios were: (i) systematic prenatal screening and vaccination of newborns at risk; (ii) universal vaccination of infants; (iii) universal vaccination of school children; (iv) universal vaccination of infants and school children; and (v) universal vaccination of infants, school children and adolescents.ResultsThe incremental cost per year of life saved for systematic prenatal screening and vaccination of newborns at risk compared with the baseline scenario was estimated to be 23 350 Swiss francs (SwF; 1996 values). The 4 universal vaccination scenarios had a much larger impact on the number of chronic infections and deaths prevented. The incremental cost per year of life saved for universal vaccination compared with systematic prenatal screening and vaccination of newborns at risk ranged from SwF6120 (infant vaccination strategy) to SwF10 200 (school children vaccination strategy). In the sensitivity analysis, prevalence, vaccine price and discount rate were key elements.ConclusionIncremental cost-effectiveness ratios are lower with universal vaccination strategies than with selective vaccination. Furthermore, with universal vaccination strategies, increasingly ambitious strategies result in higher costs but also in more incremental years of life saved.

 

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