6533b82afe1ef96bd128ccb4
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Optimization of hepatitis C virus screening strategies by birth cohort in Italy
Kondili L. A.Gamkrelidze I.Blach S.Marcellusi A.Galli M.Petta S.Puoti M.Vella S.Razavi H.Craxi A.Mennini F. S.On Behalf Of Piter Collaborating GroupFederico A.Dallio M.Loguercio C.subject
medicine.medical_specialtyCost effectivenessCost-Benefit AnalysisHepatitis C virusSettore SECS-P/06cost-effectiveneHepacivirusmedicine.disease_causeAntiviral AgentsWorld healthNO03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineInternal medicinemedicineHumansMass Screeningcost-effectivenessAntibody screensHepatologyUnder-fivebusiness.industryscreeningHealth services researchhealthcost‐effectivenessHepatitis C ChronicHepatologyHepatitis CItaly030220 oncology & carcinogenesisSettore MED/42HCVOriginal Articleepidemiology030211 gastroenterology & hepatologyLiver Disease and Public HealthQuality-Adjusted Life YearsBirth cohortbusinessWHO targetscost-effectiveness HCV screening WHO targetsDemographydescription
Abstract Background and Aims Cost‐effective screening strategies are needed to make hepatitis C virus (HCV) elimination a reality. We determined if birth cohort screening is cost‐effective in Italy. Methods A model was developed to quantify screening and healthcare costs associated with HCV. The model‐estimated prevalence of undiagnosed HCV was used to calculate the antibody screens needed annually, with a €25 000 cost‐effectiveness threshold. Outcomes were assessed under the status quo and a scenario that met the World Health Organization's targets for elimination of HCV. The elimination scenario was assessed under five screening strategies. Results A graduated birth cohort screening strategy (graduated screening 1: 1968‐1987 birth cohorts, then expanding to 1948‐1967 cohorts) was the least costly. This strategy would gain approximately 144 000 quality‐adjusted life years (QALYs) by 2031 and result in an 89.3% reduction in HCV cases, compared to an 89.6%, 89.0%, 89.7% and 88.7% reduction for inversed graduated screening, 1948‐77 birth cohort, 1958‐77 birth cohort and universal screening, respectively. Graduated screening 1 yielded the lowest incremental cost‐effectiveness ratio (ICER) of €3552 per QALY gained. Conclusions In Italy, a graduated screening scenario is the most cost‐effective strategy. Other countries could consider a similar birth cohort approach when developing HCV screening strategies.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2020-01-01 |