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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Cost-Effectiveness of Pneumococcal Vaccination of Older People: A Study in 5 Western European Countries

P. ChristieA. AmentDiana De GraeveÅKe ÖRtqvistJ. GaillatC. Rigaud-bullyB. JönssonD. VivasJan VerhaegenG. DuruC. LoiseauDavid S. FedsonRob BaltussenRob BaltussenA. Salazar Cifre

subject

Microbiology (medical)medicine.medical_specialtyPediatricsCost effectivenessCost-Benefit AnalysisPneumococcal VaccinesmedicineHumansAgedAged 80 and overbusiness.industryIncidenceMortality rateIncidence (epidemiology)VaccinationPneumonia Pneumococcalmedicine.diseaseQuality-adjusted life yearSurgeryEuropeVaccinationPneumoniaInfectious DiseasesPneumococcal vaccinePneumococcal pneumoniaQuality-Adjusted Life Yearsbusiness

description

Pneumococcal vaccination of older persons is thought to be cost-effective in preventing pneumococcal pneumonia, but evidence of clinical protection is uncertain. Because there is better evidence of vaccination effectiveness against invasive pneumococcal disease, we determined the cost-effectiveness of pneumococcal vaccination of persons agedor =65 years in preventing hospital admission for both invasive pneumococcal disease and pneumococcal pneumonia in 5 western European countries. In the base case analyses, the cost-effectiveness ratios for preventing invasive disease varied from approximately 11,000 to approximately 33,000 European currency units (ecu) per quality-adjusted life year (QALY). Assuming a common incidence (50 cases per 100,000) and mortality rate (20%-40%) for invasive disease, the cost-effectiveness ratios were12,000 ecu per QALY in all 5 countries. For preventing pneumococcal pneumonia, vaccinating all elderly persons would be highly cost-effective to cost saving. Public health authorities should consider policies for encouraging pneumococcal vaccination for all persons agedor =65 years.

https://doi.org/10.1086/313977