56 results on '"J Bilcke"'
Search Results
2. Cost per episode of diarrhea and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) in 128 low- and middle-income countries: how well do disease-specific and WHO-CHOICE estimates align?
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Li X, Bilcke J, Asare EO, Wenger C, Kwon J, Bont L, Beutels P, and Pitzer VE
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Objective: Non-disease-specific WHO-CHOICE unit costs are often used in cost and cost-effectiveness studies in the absence of country-specific data. This study aims to compare reported country-specific disease costs and the corresponding WHO-CHOICE estimates. We use generically defined "diarrhea" (including rotavirus diarrhea) and pathogen-specific "respiratory syncytial virus (RSV)" disease as examples., Methods: We updated systematic reviews for both diseases in low-income (LICs), lower-middle-income (LMICs) and upper-middle-income (UMICs) countries. Diarrheal (including a sub-analysis of rotavirus-specific) and RSV-specific outpatient and inpatient costs per episode were extracted and compared with WHO-CHOICE estimates in the same countries. If a consistent pattern of under- or over-estimation was identified, we quantified the magnitude of the discrepancy. All costs were updated to 2022 international dollar values., Results: Out of 1975 new records identified, 23 new cost studies were included. Including previous reviews, we retained 31 diarrhea and 16 RSV studies for comparison. WHO-CHOICE based direct medical costs were similar for diarrheal disease including rotavirus diarrhea, but lower for RSV-related disease. We estimated the cost per episode of diarrhea and RSV in 128 countries. RSV outpatient cost were adjusted by multiplying WHO-CHOICE costs by 6.89 (95% uncertainty interval: 5.58-8.58) in LICs and LMICs and 5.87 (4.95-6.96) in UMICs; RSV inpatient costs were multiplied by 1.43 (1.01-2.01) and 1.36 (0.82-2.27), respectively., Conclusion: WHO-CHOICE based costs should be used cautiously. They aligned well with studies for diarrheal disease, but underestimate costs of RSV-related disease. More country- and disease-specific cost data are needed, especially for RSV in LICs., Competing Interests: Competing interests VEP was previously a member of the WHO Immunization and Vaccine-related Implementation Research Advisory Committee (IVIR-AC). Outside the submitted work, PB and LB reports grants from RESCEU and PROMISE, Innovative Medicines Initiative 2 of the European Commission, but they have not received any personal fees or other personal benefits. LB is the founding chairman of the ReSViNET Foundation. He also declares that he has regular interaction with pharmaceutical and other industrial partners. He has not received personal fees or other personal benefits. Outside the submitted work, his institute UMCU has received major funding (>€100,000 per industrial partner) for investigator-initiated studies from AstraZeneca, Sanofi, Janssen, Pfizer, MSD and MeMed Diagnostics. UMCU has received major funding from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. UMCU has received major funding by Julius Clinical for participating in clinical studies sponsored by AstraZeneca, Merck and Pfizer. UMCU received minor funding (€1,000–25,000 per industrial partner) for consultation, DSMB membership or invited lectures by Ablynx, Bavaria Nordic, GSK, Novavax, Pfizer, Moderna, AstraZeneca, MSD, Sanofi, Janssen. Other authors declared no competing interests.
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- 2024
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3. Pricey or priceless: cost-effectiveness of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) prevention in infants.
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Li X, Bilcke J, and Beutels P
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Competing Interests: XL, JB and PB report grants to their institution from Respiratory Syncytial Virus Consortium in Europe (RESCEU) and Preparing for RSV immunisation and surveillance in Europe (PROMISE) outside the submitted work. PB reports unrestricted grants from Pfizer and Merck paid to University of Antwerp for unrelated projects.
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- 2023
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4. Cost-effectiveness of adding oseltamivir to primary care for influenza-like-illness: economic evaluation alongside the randomised controlled ALIC 4 E trial in 15 European countries.
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Li X, Bilcke J, van der Velden AW, Bruyndonckx R, Coenen S, Bongard E, de Paor M, Chlabicz S, Godycki-Cwirko M, Francis N, Aabenhus R, Bucher HC, Colliers A, De Sutter A, Garcia-Sangenis A, Glinz D, Harbin NJ, Kosiek K, Lindbæk M, Lionis C, Llor C, Mikó-Pauer R, Radzeviciene Jurgute R, Seifert B, Sundvall PD, Touboul Lundgren P, Tsakountakis N, Verheij TJ, Goossens H, Butler CC, and Beutels P
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- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Humans, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Oseltamivir therapeutic use, Quality of Life, Europe, Quality-Adjusted Life Years, Primary Health Care, Influenza, Human drug therapy, Virus Diseases
- Abstract
Background: Oseltamivir is usually not often prescribed (or reimbursed) for non-high-risk patients consulting for influenza-like-illness (ILI) in primary care in Europe. We aimed to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of adding oseltamivir to usual primary care in adults/adolescents (13 years +) and children with ILI during seasonal influenza epidemics, using data collected in an open-label, multi-season, randomised controlled trial of oseltamivir in 15 European countries., Methods: Direct and indirect cost estimates were based on patient reported resource use and official country-specific unit costs. Health-Related Quality of Life was assessed by EQ-5D questionnaires. Costs and quality adjusted life-years (QALY) were bootstrapped (N = 10,000) to estimate incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICER), from both the healthcare payers' and the societal perspectives, with uncertainty expressed through probabilistic sensitivity analysis and expected value for perfect information (EVPI) analysis. Additionally, scenario (self-reported spending), comorbidities subgroup and country-specific analyses were performed., Results: The healthcare payers' expected ICERs of oseltamivir were €22,459 per QALY gained in adults/adolescents and €13,001 in children. From the societal perspective, oseltamivir was cost-saving in adults/adolescents, but the ICER is €8,344 in children. Large uncertainties were observed in subgroups with comorbidities, especially for children. The expected ICERs and extent of decision uncertainty varied between countries (EVPI ranged €1-€35 per patient)., Conclusion: Adding oseltamivir to primary usual care in Europe is likely to be cost-effective for treating adults/adolescents and children with ILI from the healthcare payers' perspective (if willingness-to-pay per QALY gained > €22,459) and cost-saving in adults/adolescents from a societal perspective., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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5. The age profile of respiratory syncytial virus burden in preschool children of low- and middle-income countries: A semi-parametric, meta-regression approach.
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Antillón M, Li X, Willem L, Bilcke J, Jit M, and Beutels P
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- Humans, Child, Preschool, Infant, Respiratory Syncytial Viruses, Developing Countries, Hospital Mortality, Hospitalization, Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infections epidemiology, Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infections prevention & control, Respiratory Syncytial Virus, Human, Respiratory Tract Infections epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infections are among the primary causes of death for children under 5 years of age worldwide. A notable challenge with many of the upcoming prophylactic interventions against RSV is their short duration of protection, making the age profile of key interest to the design of prevention strategies., Methods and Findings: We leverage the RSV data collected on cases, hospitalizations, and deaths in a systematic review in combination with flexible generalized additive mixed models (GAMMs) to characterize the age burden of RSV incidence, hospitalization, and hospital-based case fatality rate (hCFR). Due to the flexible nature of GAMMs, we estimate the peak, median, and mean incidence of infection to inform discussions on the ideal "window of protection" of prophylactic interventions. In a secondary analysis, we reestimate the burden of RSV in all low- and middle-income countries. The peak age of community-based incidence is 4.8 months, and the mean and median age of infection is 18.9 and 14.7 months, respectively. Estimating the age profile using the incidence coming from hospital-based studies yields a slightly younger age profile, in which the peak age of infection is 2.6 months and the mean and median age of infection are 15.8 and 11.6 months, respectively. More severe outcomes, such as hospitalization and in-hospital death have a younger age profile. Children under 6 months of age constitute 10% of the population under 5 years of age but bear 20% to 29% of cases, 28% to 39% of hospitalizations, and 38% to 50% of deaths. On an average year, we estimate 28.23 to 31.34 million cases of RSV, between 2.95 to 3.35 million hospitalizations, and 16,835 to 19,909 in-hospital deaths in low, lower- and upper middle-income countries. In addition, we estimate 17,254 to 23,875 deaths in the community, for a total of 34,114 to 46,485 deaths. Globally, evidence shows that community-based incidence may differ by World Bank Income Group, but not hospital-based incidence, probability of hospitalization, or the probability of in-hospital death (p ≤ 0.01, p = 1, p = 0.86, 0.63, respectively). Our study is limited mainly due to the sparsity of the data, especially for low-income countries (LICs). The lack of information for some populations makes detecting heterogeneity between income groups difficult, and differences in access to care may impact the reported burden., Conclusions: We have demonstrated an approach to synthesize information on RSV outcomes in a statistically principled manner, and we estimate that the age profile of RSV burden depends on whether information on incidence is collected in hospitals or in the community. Our results suggest that the ideal prophylactic strategy may require multiple products to avert the risk among preschool children., Competing Interests: I have read the journal’s policy and the authors of this manuscript have the following competing interests: LW received grants from Research Foundation Flanders (FWO) during the conduct of the study and fees from Pfizer outside the submitted work for discussions on economic evaluation, for a total of <€3000 combined, fully paid directly to the University of Antwerp. PB reports a grant from the Respiratory Syncytial Virus Consortium in Europe (RESCEU), Innovative Medicines Initiative 2 of the European Commission, Joint Undertaking under grant agreement No 116019, during the conduct of the study; and outside the submitted work he reports grants from Pfizer, GSK, Merck and the Innovative Medicines Initiative 2 of the European Commission (N° 101034339 project PROMISE: Preparing for RSV immunisation and surveillance in Europe) as well as consultancy fees., (Copyright: © 2023 Antillón et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
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- 2023
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6. Economic burden and health-related quality-of-life among infants with respiratory syncytial virus infection: A multi-country prospective cohort study in Europe.
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Mao Z, Li X, Dacosta-Urbieta A, Billard MN, Wildenbeest J, Korsten K, Martinón-Torres F, Heikkinen T, Cunningham S, Snape MD, Robinson H, Pollard AJ, Postma M, Dervaux B, Hens N, Bont L, Bilcke J, and Beutels P
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- Child, Infant, Newborn, Humans, Infant, Child, Preschool, Financial Stress, Prospective Studies, Patient Care, Health Care Costs, Surveys and Questionnaires, Quality of Life, Europe epidemiology, Hospitalization, Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infections epidemiology, Respiratory Syncytial Virus, Human
- Abstract
Background: Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) causes a considerable disease burden in young children globally, but reliable estimates of RSV-related costs and health-related quality-of-life (HRQoL) are scarce. This study aimed to evaluate the RSV-associated costs and HRQoL effects in infants and their caregivers in four European countries., Methods: Healthy term-born infants were recruited at birth and actively followed up in four European countries. Symptomatic infants were systematically tested for RSV. Caregivers recorded the daily HRQoL of their child and themselves, measured by a modified EQ-5D with Visual Analogue Scale, for 14 consecutive days or until symptoms resolved. At the end of each RSV episode, caregivers reported healthcare resource use and work absenteeism. Direct medical costs per RSV episode were estimated from a healthcare payer's perspective and indirect costs were estimated from a societal perspective. Means and 95% confidence intervals (CI) of direct medical costs, total costs (direct costs + productivity loss) and quality-adjusted life-day (QALD) loss per RSV episode were estimated per RSV episode, as well as per subgroup (medical attendance, country)., Results: Our cohort of 1041 infants experienced 265 RSV episodes with a mean symptom duration of 12.5 days. The mean (95% CI) cost per RSV episode was €399.5 (242.3, 584.2) and €494.3 (317.7, 696.1) from the healthcare payer's and societal perspective, respectively. The mean QALD loss per RSV episode of 1.9 (1.7, 2.1) was independent of medical attendance (in contrast to costs, which also differed by country). Caregiver and infant HRQoL evolved similarly., Conclusion: This study fills essential gaps for future economic evaluations by prospectively estimating direct and indirect costs and HRQoL effects on healthy term infants and caregivers separately, for both medically attended (MA) and non-MA laboratory-confirmed RSV episodes. We generally observed greater HRQoL losses than in previous studies which used non-community and/or non-prospective designs., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: 'PB reported consulting fees from Pfizer, GSK on 2 occasions for discussions on economic evaluation, for a total of <€3000 combined, paid 100% directly to the University of Antwerp. NH reported grants from Janssen Vaccines & Prevention BV (R-11873) for collection of social contact data relevant for the spread of respiratory pathogens including SARS-CoV-2, RSV, influenza. NH reports consulting fees from Janssen Global Services for participation in advisory board related to RSV disease transmission modelling; payments made to Hasselt University. LB has regular interaction with pharmaceutical and other industrial partners. He has not received personal fees or other personal benefits. UMCU has received major funding (>€100,000 per industrial partner) for investigator initiated studies from AbbVie, MedImmune, Janssen, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Nutricia (Danone) and MeMed Diagnostics. UMCU has received major cash or in kind funding as part of the public private partnership IMI-funded RESCEU project from GSK, Novavax, Janssen, AstraZeneca, Pfizer and Sanofi. UMCU has received major funding by Julius Clinical for participating in the INFORM study sponsored by MedImmune. UMCU has received minor funding for participation in trials by Regeneron and Janssen from 2015-2017 (total annual estimate less than €20,000). UMCU received minor funding for consultation and invited lectures by AbbVie, MedImmune, Ablynx, Bavaria Nordic, MabXience, Novavax, Pfizer, Janssen (total annual estimate less than €20,000). Dr. Bont is the founding chairman of the ReSViNET Foundation. SC reported IMI – RESCEU grant funding (as detailed in manuscript), with fees paid to the University of Edinburgh. FM-T has received honoraria from GSK group of companies, Pfizer Inc, Sanofi Pasteur, MSD, Seqirus, Biofabri and Janssen for taking part in advisory boards and expert meetings and for acting as a speaker in congresses outside the scope of the submitted work. FM-T has also acted as principal investigator in randomized controlled trials of the above-mentioned companies as well as Ablynx, Gilead, Regeneron, Roche, Abbott, Novavax, and MedImmune, with honoraria paid to his institution. TH has received honoraria for lectures and/or participation in advisory boards or data monitoring committees from Janssen, Sanofi Pasteur, Enanta and MSD. MDS acted until September 2022 on behalf of the University of Oxford as an Investigator on research studies funded or supported by the vaccine manufacturers GlaxoSmithKline, Janssen, AstraZeneca, Novavax, MCM vaccines and Pfizer. He received no direct personal benefit for this work. From September 2022 he has been an employee at Moderna Biotech UK and holds stock options in this company. AJP is a member of AMS and Senior Investigator of NIHR. KK has received fees for interview for expert opinion considering the burden of RSV in older adults with IQVIA (part of Janssen) as well as interview for expert opinion considering the burden of RSV in older adults with Deallus. AD has participated as sub-investigator in clinical trials and observational studies for Novavax, MedImmune, Janssen GSK, Pfizer, Merk, Sharp Donme, ReViral, Enanta Pharmaceuticals. All payments were made to the institution and no direct payment was received. MJP is a member of JCVI and reports stock or stock options for HealthEcore (25% of shares) and PAG BV (100% of shares). All other authors report no potential conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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7. Cost-Effectiveness of Respiratory Syncytial Virus Preventive Interventions in Children: A Model Comparison Study.
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Li X, Hodgson D, Flaig J, Kieffer A, Herring WL, Beyhaghi H, Willem L, Jit M, Bilcke J, and Beutels P
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- Child, Humans, Infant, Antibodies, Monoclonal therapeutic use, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Cost-Effectiveness Analysis, Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infections prevention & control, Respiratory Syncytial Viruses
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Objectives: Model-based cost-effectiveness analyses on maternal vaccine (MV) and monoclonal antibody (mAb) interventions against respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) use context-specific data and produce varied results. Through model comparison, we aim to characterize RSV cost-effectiveness models and examine drivers for their outputs., Methods: We compared 3 static and 2 dynamic models using a common input parameter set for a hypothetical birth cohort of 100 000 infants. Year-round and seasonal programs were evaluated for MV and mAb interventions, using available evidence during the study period (eg, phase III MV and phase IIb mAb efficacy)., Results: Three static models estimated comparable medically attended (MA) cases averted versus no intervention (MV, 1019-1073; mAb, 5075-5487), with the year-round MV directly saving ∼€1 million medical and €0.3 million nonmedical costs, while gaining 4 to 5 discounted quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) annually in <1-year-olds, and mAb resulting in €4 million medical and €1.5 million nonmedical cost savings, and 21 to 25 discounted QALYs gained. In contrast, both dynamic models estimated fewer MA cases averted (MV, 402-752; mAb, 3362-4622); one showed an age shift of RSV cases, whereas the other one reported many non-MA symptomatic cases averted, especially by MV (2014). These differences can be explained by model types, assumptions on non-MA burden, and interventions' effectiveness over time., Conclusions: Our static and dynamic models produced overall similar hospitalization and death estimates, but also important differences, especially in non-MA cases averted. Despite the small QALY decrement per non-MA case, their larger number makes them influential for the costs per QALY gained of RSV interventions., (Copyright © 2023. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2023
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8. Estimating the cost-effectiveness of maternal vaccination and monoclonal antibodies for respiratory syncytial virus in Kenya and South Africa.
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Koltai M, Moyes J, Nyawanda B, Nyiro J, Munywoki PK, Tempia S, Li X, Antillon M, Bilcke J, Flasche S, Beutels P, Nokes DJ, Cohen C, and Jit M
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- Infant, Female, Child, Humans, Pregnancy, Child, Preschool, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Antibodies, Monoclonal therapeutic use, South Africa epidemiology, Kenya epidemiology, Vaccination, Respiratory Syncytial Virus, Human, Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infections epidemiology, Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infections prevention & control
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Background: Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) causes a substantial burden of acute lower respiratory infection in children under 5 years, particularly in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Maternal vaccine (MV) and next-generation monoclonal antibody (mAb) candidates have been shown to reduce RSV disease in infants in phase 3 clinical trials. The cost-effectiveness of these biologics has been estimated using disease burden data from global meta-analyses, but these are sensitive to the detailed age breakdown of paediatric RSV disease, for which there have previously been limited data., Methods: We use original hospital-based incidence data from South Africa (ZAF) and Kenya (KEN) collected between 2010 and 2018 of RSV-associated acute respiratory infection (ARI), influenza-like illness (ILI), and severe acute respiratory infection (SARI) as well as deaths with monthly age-stratification, supplemented with data on healthcare-seeking behaviour and costs to the healthcare system and households. We estimated the incremental cost per DALY averted (incremental cost-effectiveness ratio or ICER) of public health interventions by MV or mAb for a plausible range of prices (5-50 USD for MV, 10-125 USD for mAb), using an adjusted version of a previously published health economic model of RSV immunisation., Results: Our data show higher disease incidence for infants younger than 6 months of age in the case of Kenya and South Africa than suggested by earlier projections from community incidence-based meta-analyses of LMIC data. Since MV and mAb provide protection for these youngest age groups, this leads to a substantially larger reduction of disease burden and, therefore, more favourable cost-effectiveness of both interventions in both countries. Using the latest efficacy data and inferred coverage levels based on antenatal care (ANC-3) coverage (KEN: 61.7%, ZAF: 75.2%), our median estimate of the reduction in RSV-associated deaths in children under 5 years in Kenya is 10.5% (95% CI: 7.9, 13.3) for MV and 13.5% (10.7, 16.4) for mAb, while in South Africa, it is 27.4% (21.6, 32.3) and 37.9% (32.3, 43.0), respectively. Starting from a dose price of 5 USD, in Kenya, net cost (for the healthcare system) per (undiscounted) DALY averted for MV is 179 (126, 267) USD, rising to 1512 (1166, 2070) USD at 30 USD per dose; for mAb, it is 684 (543, 895) USD at 20 USD per dose and 1496 (1203, 1934) USD at 40 USD per dose. In South Africa, a MV at 5 USD per dose would be net cost-saving for the healthcare system and net cost per DALY averted is still below the ZAF's GDP per capita at 40 USD dose price (median: 2350, 95% CI: 1720, 3346). For mAb in ZAF, net cost per DALY averted is 247 (46, 510) USD at 20 USD per dose, rising to 2028 (1565, 2638) USD at 50 USD per dose and to 6481 (5364, 7959) USD at 125 USD per dose., Conclusions: Incorporation of new data indicating the disease burden is highly concentrated in the first 6 months of life in two African settings suggests that interventions against RSV disease may be more cost-effective than previously estimated., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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9. Cost-effectiveness analysis of typhoid conjugate vaccines in an outbreak setting: a modeling study.
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Phillips MT, Antillon M, Bilcke J, Bar-Zeev N, Limani F, Debellut F, Pecenka C, Neuzil KM, Gordon MA, Thindwa D, Paltiel AD, Yaesoubi R, and Pitzer VE
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- Humans, Adolescent, Cost-Effectiveness Analysis, Vaccines, Conjugate, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Typhoid Fever epidemiology, Typhoid Fever prevention & control, Typhoid-Paratyphoid Vaccines
- Abstract
Background: Several prolonged typhoid fever epidemics have been reported since 2010 throughout eastern and southern Africa, including Malawi, caused by multidrug-resistant Salmonella Typhi. The World Health Organization recommends the use of typhoid conjugate vaccines (TCVs) in outbreak settings; however, current data are limited on how and when TCVs might be introduced in response to outbreaks., Methodology: We developed a stochastic model of typhoid transmission fitted to data from Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital in Blantyre, Malawi from January 1996 to February 2015. We used the model to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of vaccination strategies over a 10-year time horizon in three scenarios: (1) when an outbreak is likely to occur; (2) when an outbreak is unlikely to occur within the next ten years; and (3) when an outbreak has already occurred and is unlikely to occur again. We considered three vaccination strategies compared to the status quo of no vaccination: (a) preventative routine vaccination at 9 months of age; (b) preventative routine vaccination plus a catch-up campaign to 15 years of age; and (c) reactive vaccination with a catch-up campaign to age 15 (for Scenario 1). We also explored variations in outbreak definitions, delays in implementation of reactive vaccination, and the timing of preventive vaccination relative to the outbreak., Results: Assuming an outbreak occurs within 10 years, we estimated that the various vaccination strategies would prevent a median of 15-60% of disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs). Reactive vaccination was the preferred strategy for WTP values of $0-300 per DALY averted. For WTP values > $300, introduction of preventative routine TCV immunization with a catch-up campaign was the preferred strategy. Routine vaccination with a catch-up campaign was cost-effective for WTP values above $890 per DALY averted if no outbreak occurs and > $140 per DALY averted if implemented after the outbreak has already occurred., Conclusions: Countries for which the spread of antimicrobial resistance is likely to lead to outbreaks of typhoid fever should consider TCV introduction. Reactive vaccination can be a cost-effective strategy, but only if delays in vaccine deployment are minimal; otherwise, introduction of preventive routine immunization with a catch-up campaign is the preferred strategy., (© 2023. This is a U.S. Government work and not under copyright protection in the US; foreign copyright protection may apply.)
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- 2023
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10. Cost-effectiveness of monoclonal antibody and maternal immunization against respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) in infants: Evaluation for six European countries.
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Getaneh AM, Li X, Mao Z, Johannesen CK, Barbieri E, van Summeren J, Wang X, Tong S, Baraldi E, Phijffer E, Rizzo C, van Wijhe M, Heikkinen T, Bont L, Willem L, Jit M, Beutels P, and Bilcke J
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- Child, Humans, Infant, Child, Preschool, Antibodies, Monoclonal, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Immunization, Europe, Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infections prevention & control, Respiratory Syncytial Virus, Human
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Background: Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) imposes a substantial burden on pediatric hospital capacity in Europe. Promising prophylactic interventions against RSV including monoclonal antibodies (mAb) and maternal immunizations (MI) are close to licensure. Therefore, we aimed to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of potential mAb and MI interventions against RSV in infants, for six European countries., Methods: We used a static cohort model to compare costs and health effects of four intervention programs to no program and to each other: year-round MI, year-round mAb, seasonal mAb (October to April), and seasonal mAb plus a catch-up program in October. Input parameters were obtained from national registries and literature. Influential input parameters were identified with the expected value of partial perfect information and extensive scenario analyses (including the impact of interventions on wheezing and asthma)., Results: From the health care payer perspective, and at a price of €50 per dose (mAb and MI), seasonal mAb plus catch-up was cost-saving in Scotland, and cost-effective for willingness-to-pay (WTP) values ≥€20,000 (England, Finland) or €30,000 (Denmark) per quality adjusted life-year (QALY) gained for all scenarios considered, except when using ICD-10 based hospitalization data. For the Netherlands, seasonal mAb was preferred (WTP value: €30,000-€90,000) for most scenarios. For Veneto region (Italy), either seasonal mAb with or without catch-up or MI was preferred, depending on the scenario and WTP value. From a full societal perspective (including leisure time lost), the seasonal mAb plus catch-up program was cost-saving for all countries except the Netherlands., Conclusion: The choice between a MI or mAb program depends on the level and duration of protection, price, availability, and feasibility of such programs, which should be based on the latest available evidence. Future research should focus on measuring accurately age-specific RSV-attributable hospitalizations in very young children., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: ‘PB reports grants from Respiratory Syncytial Virus Consortium in Europe (RESCEU), Innovative Medicines Initiative 2 of the European Commission, Joint Undertaking under grant agreement No 116,019 during the conduct of the study; and grants from Pfizer, GSK, Merck and European Commission IMI project PROMISE, outside the submitted work, but he has not received any personal fees or other personal benefits. LB’s institution, UMCU has received major funding (>€100,000 per industrial partner) for investigator initiated studies from AbbVie, MedImmune, AstraZeneca, Sanofi, Janssen, Pfizer, MSD and MeMed Diagnostics. UMCU has received major funding for the RSV GOLD study from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and major funding as part of the public private partnership IMI-funded projects (RESCEU and PROMISE). UMCU also has received major funding by Julius Clinical for participating in clinical studies sponsored by MedImmune and Pfizer and minor funding (€1,000–25,000 per industrial partner) for consultation and invited lectures by AbbVie, MedImmune, Ablynx, Bavaria Nordic, MabXience, GSK, Novavax, Pfizer, Moderna. TH declared consultancy fees from Sanofi and Janssen for Ad hoc advisory board meeting and honoraria for Lecture on the burden of RSV in children from Jassen and MSD, outside the submitted work. JvS’s institution, Nivel has received unrestricted research grants from WHO, Sanofi and the Foundation for Influenza Epidemiology for work outside the submitted work. CR declared consultancy fees for Ad hoc advisory board meeting and honoraria for Lecture from Seqirus, MSD, Sanofi, outside of the submitted work. ST was an employee of IVIDATA during the conduct of the study, and her employer received consultancy fees from Sanofi. All other authors report no potential conflicts.’, (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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11. Authors' Reply to Comment on "Cost-Effectiveness Analysis of Herpes Zoster Vaccination in 50- to 85-Year-Old Immunocompetent Belgian Cohorts: A Comparison Between No Vaccination, the Adjuvanted Subunit Vaccine, and Live-Attenuated Vaccine".
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Bilcke J and Beutels P
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Belgium, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Humans, Middle Aged, Vaccines, Attenuated, Vaccines, Subunit, Herpes Zoster prevention & control, Herpes Zoster Vaccine
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- 2022
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12. Economic Burden and Health-Related Quality of Life of Respiratory Syncytial Virus and Influenza Infection in European Community-Dwelling Older Adults.
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Mao Z, Li X, Korsten K, Bont L, Butler C, Wildenbeest J, Coenen S, Hens N, Bilcke J, and Beutels P
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- Aged, Financial Stress, Hospitalization, Humans, Independent Living, Middle Aged, Quality of Life, Influenza, Human epidemiology, Influenza, Human prevention & control, Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infections, Respiratory Syncytial Virus, Human
- Abstract
Background: Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) and influenza virus infections result in a considerable mortality and morbidity among the aging population globally. Influenza vaccination for older adults before the seasonal influenza epidemic has been evaluated to be cost-effective in many countries. Interventions against RSV in older adults are in the pipeline, and evaluating their cost-effectiveness is crucial for decision making. To inform such evaluations, our aim was to estimate average costs and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in older adults with RSV and influenza infection., Methods: The European RESCEU observational cohort study followed 1040 relatively healthy community-dwelling older adults aged 60 years and older during 2 consecutive winter seasons. Health care resource use and HRQoL were collected and analyzed during RSV episodes, and also during influenza episodes. Country-specific unit cost data were mainly obtained from national databases. Direct costs were estimated from a patient, health care provider, and health care payers' perspective, whereas indirect costs were estimated from a societal perspective. Due to small sample size, no formal statistical comparisons were made., Results: Thirty-six RSV and 60 influenza episodes were reported, including 1 hospitalization. Means (median; first-third quartile) of €26.4 (€5.5; 0-47.3) direct and €4.4 (€0; 0-0) indirect costs were reported per nonhospitalized RSV episode, and €42.5 (€36; 3.3-66.7) direct and €32.1 (€0; 0-0) indirect costs per nonhospitalized influenza episode. For RSV episodes, the utility value decreased from 0.896 (0.928; 0.854-0.953) to 0.801 (0.854; 0.712-0.937) from preseason to 1 week after symptom onset; for influenza, the change was from 0.872 (0.895; 0.828-0.953) to 0.664 (0.686; 0.574-0.797)., Conclusions: The average costs and HRQoL estimates of older adults treated outside the hospital can be used to inform the design of future studies and the decision making regarding interventions to prevent RSV infection in older adults. Larger studies are needed to provide better country-specific and complementary cost estimates and to allow for formal statistical comparison of costs between RSV and influenza., Clinical Trials Registration: NCT03621930., Competing Interests: Potential conflicts of interest. L. B. declares regular interaction with pharmaceutical and other industrial partners, but has not received personal fees or other personal benefits. The University Medical Center Utrecht (UMCU) has received major funding (>€100 000 per industrial partner) for investigator-initiated studies from AbbVie, MedImmune, Janssen, Pfizer, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and MeMed Diagnostics; major cash or in-kind funding as part of the public private partnership IMI-funded RESCEU project from GSK, Novavax, Janssen, AstraZeneca, Pfizer, and Sanofi; and major funding from Julius Clinical for participating in the INFORM study. P. B. declares consulting fees from Pfizer and GSK on two occasions for discussions on economic evaluation and the payments were made to the University of Antwerp. N. H. declares grants from Janssen Vaccines & Prevention BV (R-11873) to collect social contact data relevant for the spread of respiratory pathogens including SARS-CoV-2, RSV, and influenza; and consulting fees from Janssen Global Services to participate in an advisory board related to RSV disease transmission modelling and the payments were made to Hasselt University. All other authors report no potential conflicts of interest. All authors have submitted the ICMJE Form for Disclosure of Potential Conflicts of Interest. Conflicts that the editors consider relevant to the content of the manuscript have been disclosed., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press for the Infectious Diseases Society of America. All rights reserved. For permissions, e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2022
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13. Cost-effectiveness of Respiratory Syncytial Virus Disease Prevention Strategies: Maternal Vaccine Versus Seasonal or Year-Round Monoclonal Antibody Program in Norwegian Children.
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Li X, Bilcke J, Vázquez Fernández L, Bont L, Willem L, Wisløff T, Jit M, and Beutels P
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- Antibodies, Monoclonal therapeutic use, Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized therapeutic use, Antiviral Agents therapeutic use, Child, Child, Preschool, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Palivizumab therapeutic use, Respiratory Syncytial Viruses, Seasons, Communicable Diseases drug therapy, Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infections drug therapy, Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infections epidemiology, Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infections prevention & control, Vaccines therapeutic use
- Abstract
Background: Every winter, respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) disease results in thousands of cases in Norwegian children under 5 years of age. We aim to assess the RSV-related economic burden and the cost-effectiveness of upcoming RSV disease prevention strategies including year-round maternal immunization and year-round and seasonal monoclonal antibody (mAb) programs., Methods: Epidemiological and cost data were obtained from Norwegian national registries, while quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) lost and intervention characteristics were extracted from literature and phase 3 clinical trials. A static model was used and uncertainty was accounted for probabilistically. Value of information was used to assess decision uncertainty. Extensive scenario analyses were conducted, including accounting for long-term consequences of RSV disease., Results: We estimate an annual average of 13 517 RSV cases and 1572 hospitalizations in children under 5, resulting in 79.6 million Norwegian kroner (~€8 million) treatment costs. At €51 per dose for all programs, a 4-month mAb program for neonates born in November to February is the cost-effective strategy for willingness to pay (WTP) values up to €40 000 per QALY gained. For higher WTP values, the longer 6-month mAb program that immunizes neonates from October to March becomes cost-effective. Sensitivity analyses show that year-round maternal immunization can become a cost-effective strategy if priced lower than mAb., Conclusions: Assuming the same pricing, seasonal mAb programs are cost-effective over year-round programs in Norway. The timing and duration of the cost-effective seasonal program are sensitive to the pattern of the RSV season in a country, so continued RSV surveillance data are essential., Competing Interests: Potential conflicts of interest. T. W. received funding for working on vaccines related to other diseases, varicella, and herpes zoster from MSD Norway, outside the submitted work. P. B. declared consultancy fees paid to the University of Antwerp from GSK and Pfizer on 2 occasions for discussions on economic evaluation (<€3000 in total), outside the submitted work. L. B. declares regular interaction with pharmaceutical and other industrial partners, but has not received personal fees or other personal benefits. University Medical Center Utrecht (UCMU) has received major funding (>€100,000 per industrial partner) for investigator-initiated studies from AbbVie, MedImmune, Janssen, Pfizer, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and MeMed Diagnostics. UMCU has received major cash or in-kind funding as part of the public-private partnership Innovative Medicines Initiative–funded RESCEU project from GSK, Novavax, Janssen, AstraZeneca, Pfizer, and Sanofi. UMCU has received major funding by Julius Clinical for participating in the INFORM study. M. J. is an affiliate member of RESCEU, but neither M. J. nor his research group has received any forms of pecuniary or other support from the pharmaceutical industry. All other authors report no potential conflicts of interest. All authors have submitted the ICMJE Form for Disclosure of Potential Conflicts of Interest. Conflicts that the editors consider relevant to the content of the manuscript have been disclosed., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press for the Infectious Diseases Society of America. All rights reserved. For permissions, e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2022
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14. Generating, Presenting, and Interpreting Cost-Effectiveness Results in the Context of Uncertainty: A Tutorial for Deeper Knowledge and Better Practice.
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Bilcke J and Beutels P
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- Humans, Probability, Uncertainty, Cost-Benefit Analysis
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This tutorial aims to help make the best available methods for generating and presenting cost-effectiveness results with uncertainty common practice. We believe there is a need for such type of tutorial because some erroneous practices persist (e.g., identifying the cost-effective intervention as the one with the highest probability to be cost-effective), while some of the more advanced methods are hardly used (e.g., the net loss statistic 'NL', expected net loss curves and frontier). The tutorial explains with simple examples the pros and cons of using ICER, incremental net benefit and NL to identify the cost-effective intervention, both with and without uncertainty accounted for probabilistically. A flowchart provides practical guidance on when and how to use ICER, incremental net benefit or NL. Different ways to express and present uncertainty in the results are described, including confidence and credible intervals, the probability that a strategy is cost-effective (as usually shown with cost-effectiveness acceptability curves (CEACs)) and the expected value of perfect information (EVPI). The tutorial clarifies and illustrates why EVPI is the only measure accounting fully for decision uncertainty, and why NL curves and the NL frontier may be preferred over CEACs and other plots for presenting cost-effectiveness results in the context of uncertainty. The easy calculations and a worked-out real-life example will help users to thoroughly understand and correctly interpret key cost-effectiveness results. Examples with mathematical calculations, interpretation, plots and R code are provided.
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- 2022
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15. Estimating the effect of vaccination on antimicrobial-resistant typhoid fever in 73 countries supported by Gavi: a mathematical modelling study.
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Birger R, Antillón M, Bilcke J, Dolecek C, Dougan G, Pollard AJ, Neuzil KM, Frost I, Laxminarayan R, and Pitzer VE
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- Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Humans, Infant, Models, Theoretical, Vaccination, Vaccines, Conjugate, Anti-Infective Agents, Typhoid Fever epidemiology, Typhoid Fever prevention & control, Typhoid-Paratyphoid Vaccines
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Background: Multidrug resistance and fluoroquinolone non-susceptibility (FQNS) are major concerns for the epidemiology and treatment of typhoid fever. The 2018 prequalification of the first typhoid conjugate vaccine (TCV) by WHO provides an opportunity to limit the transmission and burden of antimicrobial-resistant typhoid fever., Methods: We combined output from mathematical models of typhoid transmission with estimates of antimicrobial resistance from meta-analyses to predict the burden of antimicrobial-resistant typhoid fever across 73 lower-income countries eligible for support from Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance. We considered FQNS and multidrug resistance separately. The effect of vaccination was predicted on the basis of forecasts of vaccine coverage. We explored how the potential effect of vaccination on the prevalence of antimicrobial resistance varied depending on key model parameters., Findings: The introduction of routine immunisation with TCV at age 9 months with a catch-up campaign up to age 15 years was predicted to avert 46-74% of all typhoid fever cases in 73 countries eligible for Gavi support. Vaccination was predicted to reduce the relative prevalence of antimicrobial-resistant typhoid fever by 16% (95% prediction interval [PI] 0-49). TCV introduction with a catch-up campaign was predicted to avert 42·5 million (95% PI 24·8-62·8 million) cases and 506 000 (95% PI 187 000-1·9 million) deaths caused by FQNS typhoid fever, and 21·2 million (95% PI 16·4-26·5 million) cases and 342 000 (95% PI 135 000-1·5 million) deaths from multidrug-resistant typhoid fever over 10 years following introduction., Interpretation: Our results indicate the benefits of prioritising TCV introduction for countries with a high avertable burden of antimicrobial-resistant typhoid fever., Funding: The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests RB is now employed by Merck Sharp & Dohme. AJP has received grants from National Institute for Health Research, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Wellcome Trust, and Astra Zeneca outside of the submitted work; chairs the UK Department of Health's Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation; and is a member of WHO's Strategic Advisory Group of Experts. VEP has received reimbursement from Merck and Pfizer for travel expenses to Scientific Input Engagements unrelated to the subject of this Article; and is a member of the WHO's Immunization and Vaccine-related Implementation Research Advisory Committee. The views expressed in this manuscript are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation, Department of Health, or WHO. All other authors declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY 4.0 license. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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16. Cost-Effectiveness Analysis of Herpes Zoster Vaccination in 50- to 85-Year-Old Immunocompetent Belgian Cohorts: A Comparison between No Vaccination, the Adjuvanted Subunit Vaccine, and Live-Attenuated Vaccine.
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Pieters Z, Ogunjimi B, Beutels P, and Bilcke J
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- Adjuvants, Immunologic, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Belgium, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Herpesvirus 3, Human, Humans, Middle Aged, Vaccination, Vaccines, Attenuated, Vaccines, Subunit, Herpes Zoster prevention & control, Herpes Zoster Vaccine, Neuralgia, Postherpetic prevention & control
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Background: A new adjuvanted subunit vaccine (HZ/su), with higher vaccine efficacy than live-attenuated vaccine (ZVL), has been licensed in Europe since March 2018. Therefore, Belgian decision-makers might need to re-assess their recommendations for vaccination against herpes zoster (HZ)., Methods: We conducted a cost-effectiveness analysis, using a Markov decision tree, of vaccinating 50- to 85-year-old immunocompetent Belgian cohorts with no vaccination, HZ/su, ZVL, and ZVL with booster after 10 years. Due to the uncertainty in vaccine waning of HZ/su vaccine beyond 4 years, we used a logarithmic and 1-minus-exponential function to model respectively a long and short duration of protection. We used a lifetime time horizon and implemented the health care payer perspective throughout the analysis., Results: HZ/su had the greatest impact in avoiding health and economic burden. However, it would never become cost-effective at a willingness-to-pay threshold of €40,000 per quality-adjusted life year (QALY) gained at its market price set by the manufacturer in the USA. Depending on the waning function assumed for HZ/su, the price per dose needs to drop 60% or 83% such that vaccination with HZ/su, assuming respectively a long or short duration of protection, would become cost-effective in 50- and 80-year-old individuals. At €40,000 per QALY gained, ZVL or ZVL with booster was never found cost-effective compared with HZ/su, even if only administration cost was considered., Conclusion: HZ/su is cost-effective in the 50-year-old age cohort at the unofficial Belgian threshold of €40,000 per QALY gained, if its price drops to €55.40 per dose. This result is, however, very sensitive to the assumed duration of protection of the vaccine, and the assumed severity and QALY loss associated with HZ and post-herpetic neuralgia (PHN)., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Switzerland AG.)
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- 2022
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17. Belgian population norms for the EQ-5D-5L, 2018.
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Van Wilder L, Charafeddine R, Beutels P, Bruyndonckx R, Cleemput I, Demarest S, De Smedt D, Hens N, Scohy A, Speybroeck N, Van der Heyden J, Yokota RTC, Van Oyen H, Bilcke J, and Devleesschauwer B
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- Aged, 80 and over, Belgium epidemiology, Female, Health Surveys, Humans, Surveys and Questionnaires, Health Status, Quality of Life psychology
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Purpose: Health-related quality of life outcomes are increasingly used to monitor population health and health inequalities and to assess the (cost-) effectiveness of health interventions. The EQ-5D-5L has been included in the Belgian Health Interview Survey, providing a new source of population-based self-perceived health status information. This study aims to estimate Belgian population norms for the EQ-5D-5L by sex, age, and region and to analyze its association with educational attainment., Methods: The BHIS 2018 provided EQ-5D-5L data for a nationally representative sample of the Belgian population. The dimension scores and index values were analyzed using logistic and linear regressions, respectively, accounting for the survey design., Results: More than half of respondents reported problems of pain/discomfort, while over a quarter reported problems of anxiety/depression. The average index value was 0.84. Women reported more problems on all dimensions, but particularly on anxiety/depression and pain/discomfort, resulting in significantly lower index values. Problems with mobility, self-care, and usual activities showed a sharp increase after the age of 80 years. Consequently, index values decreased significantly by age. Lower education was associated with a higher prevalence of problems for all dimensions except anxiety/depression and with a significantly lower index value., Conclusion: This paper presents the first nationally representative Belgian population norms using the EQ-5D-5L. Inclusion of the EQ-5D in future surveys will allow monitoring over time of self-reported health, disease burden, and health inequalities., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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18. Impact of Adding Oseltamivir to Usual Care on Quality-Adjusted Life-Years During Influenza-Like Illness.
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Bruyndonckx R, Bilcke J, van der Velden AW, Li X, Hens N, Coenen S, Butler CC, and Beutels P
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Antiviral Agents economics, Child, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Decision Making, Europe epidemiology, Health Care Costs, Humans, Influenza, Human economics, Influenza, Human epidemiology, Middle Aged, Oseltamivir economics, Visual Analog Scale, Young Adult, Antiviral Agents therapeutic use, Influenza, Human drug therapy, Oseltamivir therapeutic use, Quality-Adjusted Life Years
- Abstract
Objectives: The ALIC
4 E trial has shown that oseltamivir reduces recovery time while increasing the risk of nausea. This secondary analysis of the ALIC4 E trial aimed to determine the gain in quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) associated with adding oseltamivir to usual primary care in patients presenting with influenza-like illness (ILI)., Methods: Patients with ILI were recruited during the influenza season (2015-2018) in 15 European countries. Patients were assigned to usual care with or without oseltamivir through stratified randomization (age, severity, comorbidities, and symptom onset). Patients' health status was valued with the EQ-5D and visual analog scale (VAS) for up to 28 days. Average EQ-5D and VAS scores over time were estimated for both treatment groups using one-inflated beta regression in children (<13 years old) and adults (≥13 years old). QALY gain was calculated as the difference between the groups. Sensitivity analysis considered the value set to convert EQ-5D answers to summary scores and the follow-up period., Results: In adults, oseltamivir gained 0.0006 (95% confidence interval 0.0002-0.0010) QALYs, whereas no statistically significant gain was found in children (14-day follow-up, EQ-5D). QALY gains were statistically significant in patients aged ≥65 years, patients without relevant comorbidities, or patients experiencing symptoms for ≤48 hours. Using VAS and accounting for 28-day follow-up resulted in higher QALY gain., Conclusions: QALY gain owing to oseltamivir is limited compared with other diseases, and its clinical meaningfulness remains to be determined. Further analysis is needed to evaluate whether QALY gain and its impact on ILI treatment cost render oseltamivir cost-effective., (Copyright © 2021 ISPOR–The International Society for Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes Research, Inc. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2022
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19. Direct and Indirect Costs of Influenza-Like Illness Treated with and Without Oseltamivir in 15 European Countries: A Descriptive Analysis Alongside the Randomised Controlled ALIC 4 E Trial.
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Li X, Bilcke J, van der Velden AW, Bongard E, Bruyndonckx R, Sundvall PD, Harbin NJ, Coenen S, Francis N, Bruno P, Garcia-Sangenis A, Glinz D, Kosiek K, Mikó-Pauer R, Radzeviciene Jurgute R, Seifert B, Tsakountakis N, Aabenhus R, Butler CC, and Beutels P
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- Antiviral Agents therapeutic use, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Europe, Humans, Influenza, Human drug therapy, Influenza, Human epidemiology, Oseltamivir therapeutic use
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Background and Objective: Influenza-like illness (ILI) leads to a substantial disease burden every winter in Europe; however, oseltamivir is not frequently prescribed to ILI patients in the primary-care setting. An open-label, multi-country, multi-season, randomised controlled trial investigated the effectiveness of oseltamivir for treating ILI in 15 European countries. We aimed to evaluate whether patients presenting with ILI in primary care and being managed with the addition of oseltamivir to usual care had lower average direct and indirect costs compared to patients with usual care alone., Methods: Resource use data were extracted from participants' daily diaries. Itemised country-specific unit costs were collected through official tariffs, pharmacies or literature. Costs were converted to 2018 values. The null hypothesis was tested based on one-sided credible intervals (CrIs) obtained by bootstrapping. Base-case analysis estimated direct cost and productivity losses using itemised costed resource use and the human capital approach. Scenario analyses with self-reported spending rather than itemised costing were also performed., Results: Patients receiving oseltamivir (N = 1306) reported fewer healthcare visits, medication uses, hospital attendances and paid-work hours lost than the other patients (N = 1298). Excluding the oseltamivir cost, the average direct costs were lower in patients treated with oseltamivir from all perspectives, but these differences were not statistically significant (perspective of patient: €17 [0-95% Crl: 16-19] vs. €24 [5-100% Crl: 18-29]; healthcare provider: €37 [28-67] vs. €44 [25-55]; healthcare payers: €54 [45-85] vs. €68 [45-81]; and society: €423 [399-478] vs. €451 [390-478]). Scenario and age-group analyses confirmed these findings, but with some between-country differences., Conclusion: The average direct and indirect costs were consistently lower in patients treated with oseltamivir than in patients without from four perspectives (excluding the oseltamivir cost). However, these differences were not statistically significant., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
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- 2021
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20. Strategies for typhoid conjugate vaccines in endemic nations - Authors' reply.
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Pitzer VE, Pollard AJ, and Bilcke J
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- Cost-Benefit Analysis, Humans, Salmonella typhi immunology, Vaccines, Conjugate, Typhoid Fever epidemiology, Typhoid Fever prevention & control, Typhoid-Paratyphoid Vaccines
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- 2021
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21. A Computationally Efficient Method for Probabilistic Parameter Threshold Analysis for Health Economic Evaluations.
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Pieters Z, Strong M, Pitzer VE, Beutels P, and Bilcke J
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- Cost-Benefit Analysis statistics & numerical data, Cost-Benefit Analysis trends, Data Analysis, Humans, Statistics, Nonparametric, Cost-Benefit Analysis methods, Models, Economic, Models, Statistical
- Abstract
Background . Threshold analysis is used to determine the threshold value of an input parameter at which a health care strategy becomes cost-effective. Typically, it is performed in a deterministic manner, in which inputs are varied one at a time while the remaining inputs are each fixed at their mean value. This approach will result in incorrect threshold values if the cost-effectiveness model is nonlinear or if inputs are correlated. Objective . To propose a probabilistic method for performing threshold analysis, which accounts for the joint uncertainty in all input parameters and makes no assumption about the linearity of the cost-effectiveness model. Methods . Three methods are compared: 1) deterministic threshold analysis (DTA); 2) a 2-level Monte Carlo approach, which is considered the gold standard; and 3) a regression-based method using a generalized additive model (GAM), which identifies threshold values directly from a probabilistic sensitivity analysis sample. Results . We applied the 3 methods to estimate the minimum probability of hospitalization for typhoid fever at which 3 different vaccination strategies become cost-effective in Uganda. The threshold probability of hospitalization at which routine vaccination at 9 months with catchup campaign to 5 years becomes cost-effective is estimated to be 0.060 and 0.061 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.058-0.064), respectively, for 2-level and GAM. According to DTA, routine vaccination at 9 months with catchup campaign to 5 years would never become cost-effective. The threshold probability at which routine vaccination at 9 months with catchup campaign to 15 years becomes cost-effective is estimated to be 0.092 (DTA), 0.074 (2-level), and 0.072 (95% CI, 0.069-0.075) (GAM). GAM is 430 times faster than the 2-level approach. Conclusions . When the cost-effectiveness model is nonlinear, GAM provides similar threshold values to the 2-level Monte Carlo approach and is computationally more efficient. DTA provides incorrect results and should not be used.
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- 2020
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22. Economic costs analysis of uncomplicated malaria case management in the Peruvian Amazon.
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Moreno-Gutierrez D, Rosas-Aguirre A, Llanos-Cuentas A, Bilcke J, Barboza JL, Hayette MP, Contreras-Mancilla J, Aguirre K, Gamboa D, Rodriguez H, Speybroeck N, and Beutels P
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, Middle Aged, Peru, Young Adult, Case Management economics, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Malaria, Falciparum prevention & control, Malaria, Vivax prevention & control
- Abstract
Background: Case management is one of the principal strategies for malaria control. This study aimed to estimate the economic costs of uncomplicated malaria case management and explore the influence of health-seeking behaviours on those costs., Methods: A knowledge, attitudes and practices (KAP) survey was applied to 680 households of fifteen communities in Mazan-Loreto in March 2017, then a socio-economic survey was conducted in September 2017 among 161 individuals with confirmed uncomplicated malaria in the past 3 months. Total costs per episode were estimated from both provider (Ministry of Health, MoH) and patient perspectives. Direct costs were estimated using a standard costing estimation procedure, while the indirect costs considered the loss of incomes among patients, substitute labourers and companions due to illness in terms of the monthly minimum wage. Sensitivity analysis evaluated the uncertainty of the average cost per episode., Results: The KAP survey showed that most individuals (79.3%) that had malaria went to a health facility for a diagnosis and treatment, 2.7% received those services from community health workers, and 8% went to a drugstore or were self-treated at home. The average total cost per episode in the Mazan district was US$ 161. The cost from the provider's perspective was US$ 30.85 per episode while from the patient's perspective the estimated cost was US$ 131 per episode. The average costs per Plasmodium falciparum episode (US$ 180) were higher than those per Plasmodium vivax episode (US$ 156) due to longer time lost from work by patients with P. falciparum infections (22.2 days) than by patients with P. vivax infections (17.0 days). The delayed malaria diagnosis (after 48 h of the onset of symptoms) was associated with the time lost from work due to illness (adjusted mean ratio 1.8; 95% CI 1.3, 2.6). The average cost per malaria episode was most sensitive to the uncertainty around the lost productivity cost due to malaria., Conclusions: Despite the provision of free malaria case management by MoH, there is delay in seeking care and the costs of uncomplicated malaria are mainly borne by the families. These costs are not well perceived by the society and the substantial financial impact of the disease can be frequently undervalued in public policy planning.
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- 2020
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23. Health and economic burden of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) disease and the cost-effectiveness of potential interventions against RSV among children under 5 years in 72 Gavi-eligible countries.
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Li X, Willem L, Antillon M, Bilcke J, Jit M, and Beutels P
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- Child, Preschool, Humans, Infant, Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infections prevention & control, Cost of Illness, Cost-Benefit Analysis methods, Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infections economics, Respiratory Syncytial Viruses pathogenicity
- Abstract
Background: Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) frequently causes acute lower respiratory infection in children under 5, representing a high burden in Gavi-eligible countries (mostly low-income and lower-middle-income). Since multiple RSV interventions, including vaccines and monoclonal antibody (mAb) candidates, are under development, we aim to evaluate the key drivers of the cost-effectiveness of maternal vaccination and infant mAb for 72 Gavi countries., Methods: A static Multi-Country Model Application for RSV Cost-Effectiveness poLicy (MCMARCEL) was developed to follow RSV-related events monthly from birth until 5 years of age. MCMARCEL was parameterised using country- and age-specific demographic, epidemiological, and cost data. The interventions' level and duration of effectiveness were guided by the World Health Organization's preferred product characteristics and other literature. Maternal vaccination and mAb were assumed to require single-dose administration at prices assumed to align with other Gavi-subsidised technologies. The effectiveness and the prices of the interventions were simultaneously varied in extensive scenario analyses. Disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) were the primary health outcomes for cost-effectiveness, integrated with probabilistic sensitivity analyses and Expected Value of Partially Perfect Information analysis., Results: The RSV-associated disease burden among children in these 72 countries is estimated at an average of 20.8 million cases, 1.8 million hospital admissions, 40 thousand deaths, 1.2 million discounted DALYs, and US$611 million discounted direct costs. Strategy 'mAb' is more effective due to its assumed longer duration of protection versus maternal vaccination, but it was also assumed to be more expensive. Given all parameterised uncertainty, the optimal strategy of choice tends to change for increasing willingness to pay (WTP) values per DALY averted from the current situation to maternal vaccination (at WTP > US$1000) to mAB (at WTP > US$3500). The age-specific proportions of cases that are hospitalised and/or die cause most of the uncertainty in the choice of optimal strategy. Results are broadly similar across countries., Conclusions: Both the maternal and mAb strategies need to be competitively priced to be judged as relatively cost-effective. Information on the level and duration of protection is crucial, but also more and better disease burden evidence-especially on RSV-attributable hospitalisation and death rates-is needed to support policy choices when novel RSV products become available.
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- 2020
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24. Cost-effectiveness of routine and campaign use of typhoid Vi-conjugate vaccine in Gavi-eligible countries: a modelling study.
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Bilcke J, Antillón M, Pieters Z, Kuylen E, Abboud L, Neuzil KM, Pollard AJ, Paltiel AD, and Pitzer VE
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- Adolescent, Child, Preschool, Developing Countries, Global Health, Humans, Infant, Quality-Adjusted Life Years, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Immunization Programs economics, Typhoid Fever prevention & control, Typhoid-Paratyphoid Vaccines administration & dosage, Typhoid-Paratyphoid Vaccines economics, Vaccination economics, Vaccines, Conjugate immunology
- Abstract
Background: Typhoid fever is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in low-income and middle-income countries. In 2017, WHO recommended the programmatic use of typhoid Vi-conjugate vaccine (TCV) in endemic settings, and Gavi, The Vaccine Alliance, has pledged support for vaccine introduction in these countries. Country-level health economic evaluations are now needed to inform decision-making., Methods: In this modelling study, we compared four strategies: no vaccination, routine immunisation at 9 months, and routine immunisation at 9 months with catch-up campaigns to either age 5 years or 15 years. For each of the 54 countries eligible for Gavi support, output from an age-structured transmission-dynamic model was combined with country-specific treatment and vaccine-related costs, treatment outcomes, and disability weights to estimate the reduction in typhoid burden, identify the strategy that maximised average net benefit (ie, the optimal strategy) across a range of country-specific willingness-to-pay (WTP) values, estimate and investigate the uncertainties surrounding our findings, and identify the epidemiological conditions under which vaccination is optimal., Findings: The optimal strategy was either no vaccination or TCV immunisation including a catch-up campaign. Routine vaccination with a catch-up campaign to 15 years of age was optimal in 38 countries, assuming a WTP value of at least US$200 per disability-adjusted life-year (DALY) averted, or assuming a WTP value of at least 25% of each country's gross domestic product (GDP) per capita per DALY averted, at a vaccine price of $1·50 per dose (but excluding Gavi's contribution according to each country's transition phase). This vaccination strategy was also optimal in 48 countries assuming a WTP of at least $500 per DALY averted, in 51 with assumed WTP values of at least $1000, in 47 countries assuming a WTP value of at least 50% of GDP per capita per DALY averted, and in 49 assuming a minimum of 100%. Vaccination was likely to be cost-effective in countries with 300 or more typhoid cases per 100 000 person-years. Uncertainty about the probability of hospital admission (and typhoid incidence and mortality) had the greatest influence on the optimal strategy., Interpretation: Countries should establish their own WTP threshold and consider routine TCV introduction, including a catch-up campaign when vaccination is optimal on the basis of this threshold. Obtaining improved estimates of the probability of hospital admission would be valuable whenever the optimal strategy is uncertain., Funding: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Research Foundation-Flanders, and the Belgian-American Education Foundation., (Copyright © 2019 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY 4.0 license. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2019
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25. Sponsorship Bias in Base-Case Values and Uncertainty Bounds of Health Economic Evaluations? A Systematic Review of Herpes Zoster Vaccination.
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Bilcke J, Verelst F, and Beutels P
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Conflict of Interest, Costs and Cost Analysis, Drug Industry methods, Economics, Pharmaceutical, Humans, Quality-Adjusted Life Years, Uncertainty, Cost-Benefit Analysis methods, Herpes Zoster Vaccine administration & dosage, Herpes Zoster Vaccine economics, Neuralgia, Postherpetic economics, Neuralgia, Postherpetic prevention & control
- Abstract
Background: New health technologies are more likely adopted when they have lower incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) and/or when their ICER is presented with more certainty. Industry-funded (IF) health economic evaluations use often more favorable base-case values, leading to more favorable conclusions., Purpose: To study whether IF health economic evaluations of varicella-zoster virus vaccination in the elderly use more favorable base-case values and account for less uncertainty than non-industry-funded (NIF) evaluations., Data Source: PubMed. Data extracted: funding source; incremental cost per quality-adjusted life year (QALY) gained; vaccine price; study quality score; base-case values, uncertainty ranges, and data sources for influential parameters: duration of vaccine protection, utility loss due to herpes zoster (HZ) disease, percentage of HZ patients developing postherpetic neuralgia (PHN), and duration of PHN., Data Synthesis: qualitative comparisons; Fisher exact test for differences in study quality score and 1-sided Mann-Whitney U tests for differences in base-case values and uncertainty ranges., Results: Despite using the same data sources, IF studies ( n = 10) assume a longer duration of vaccine protection ( U = 56, P = 0.03), have a higher percentage of HZ patients developing PHN ( U = 22/33, P = 0.02/0.03 for ages 60-64/65-69), and tend to use higher HZ utility loss than NIF studies ( n = 11) for their baseline. IF studies show lower ICERs given similar or even higher vaccine prices than NIF studies, consider less uncertainty around the duration of vaccine protection ( U = 8, P < 0.001), and tend to use less uncertainty around the duration of PHN. Yet their quality has been rated equally well, using current standard quality rating tools., Conclusion: Researchers and decision makers should be aware of potential sponsorship bias in health economic evaluations, especially in the way source data are used to specify base-case values and uncertainty ranges.
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- 2018
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26. Case Fatality Rate of Enteric Fever in Endemic Countries: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis.
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Pieters Z, Saad NJ, Antillón M, Pitzer VE, and Bilcke J
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- Africa epidemiology, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Asia epidemiology, Humans, Salmonella paratyphi A drug effects, Salmonella paratyphi A isolation & purification, Salmonella typhi drug effects, Salmonella typhi isolation & purification, Endemic Diseases, Paratyphoid Fever mortality, Typhoid Fever mortality
- Abstract
Enteric fever is a febrile illness, occurring mostly in Asia and Africa, which can present as a severe and possibly fatal disease. Currently, a case fatality rate (CFR) of 1% is assumed when evaluating the global burden of enteric fever. Until now, no meta-analysis has been conducted to summarize mortality from enteric fever. Therefore, we conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis to aggregate all available evidence. We estimated an overall CFR of 2.49% (95% confidence interval, 1.65%-3.75%; n = 44), and a CFR in hospitalized patients of 4.45% (2.85%-6.88%; n = 21 of 44). There was considerably heterogeneity in estimates of the CFR from individual studies. Neither age nor antimicrobial resistance were significant prognostic factors, but limited data were available for these analyses. The combined estimate of the CFR for enteric fever is higher than previously estimated, and the evaluation of prognostic factors, including antimicrobial resistance, urgently requires more data.
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- 2018
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27. Economic evaluation of pneumococcal vaccines for adults aged over 50 years in Belgium.
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Willem L, Blommaert A, Hanquet G, Thiry N, Bilcke J, Theeten H, Verhaegen J, Goossens H, and Beutels P
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- Age Factors, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Belgium epidemiology, Cost of Illness, Female, Health Services Accessibility economics, Humans, Incidence, Male, Middle Aged, Pneumococcal Infections epidemiology, Pneumococcal Infections microbiology, Pneumococcal Infections prevention & control, Pneumococcal Vaccines therapeutic use, Quality-Adjusted Life Years, Streptococcus pneumoniae immunology, Vaccination methods, Vaccines, Conjugate economics, Vaccines, Conjugate therapeutic use, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Pneumococcal Infections economics, Pneumococcal Vaccines economics, Vaccination economics
- Abstract
Streptococcus pneumoniae causes a high disease burden including pneumonia, meningitis and septicemia. Both a polysaccharide vaccine targeting 23 serotypes (PPV23) and a 13-valent conjugate vaccine (PCV13) are indicated for persons aged over 50 years. We developed and parameterized a static multi-cohort model to estimate the incremental cost-effectiveness and budget-impact of these vaccines at different uptake levels. Using three different vaccine efficacy scenarios regarding non-invasive pneumococcal pneumonia and extensive uni- and multivariate sensitivity analyses, we found a strong preference for PPV23 over PCV13 in all age groups at willingness to pay levels below €300 000 per quality adjusted life year (QALY). PPV23 vaccination would cost on average about €83 000, €60 000 and €52 000 per QALY gained in 50-64, 65-74 and 75-84 year olds, whereas for PCV13 this is about €171 000, €201 000 and €338 000, respectively. Strategies combining PPV23 and PCV13 vaccines were most effective but generally less cost-effective. When assuming a combination of increased duration of PCV13 protection, increased disease burden preventable by PCV13 and a 75% reduction of the PCV13 price, PCV13 could become more attractive in <75 year olds, but would remain less attractive than PPV23 from age 75 years onwards. These observations are independent of the assumption that PPV23 has 0% efficacy against non-invasive pneumococcal pneumonia. Pneumococcal vaccination would be most cost-effective in Belgium, when achieving high uptake with PPV23 in 75-84 year olds, as well as by negotiating a lower market-conform PPV23 price to improve uptake and cost-effectiveness.
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- 2018
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28. Lessons from a decade of individual-based models for infectious disease transmission: a systematic review (2006-2015).
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Willem L, Verelst F, Bilcke J, Hens N, and Beutels P
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- Epidemics, Humans, Terminology as Topic, Vaccines therapeutic use, Disease Transmission, Infectious economics, Disease Transmission, Infectious prevention & control, Models, Theoretical
- Abstract
Background: Individual-based models (IBMs) are useful to simulate events subject to stochasticity and/or heterogeneity, and have become well established to model the potential (re)emergence of pathogens (e.g., pandemic influenza, bioterrorism). Individual heterogeneity at the host and pathogen level is increasingly documented to influence transmission of endemic diseases and it is well understood that the final stages of elimination strategies for vaccine-preventable childhood diseases (e.g., polio, measles) are subject to stochasticity. Even so it appears IBMs for both these phenomena are not well established. We review a decade of IBM publications aiming to obtain insights in their advantages, pitfalls and rationale for use and to make recommendations facilitating knowledge transfer within and across disciplines., Methods: We systematically identified publications in Web of Science and PubMed from 2006-2015 based on title/abstract/keywords screening (and full-text if necessary) to retrieve topics, modeling purposes and general specifications. We extracted detailed modeling features from papers on established vaccine-preventable childhood diseases based on full-text screening., Results: We identified 698 papers, which applied an IBM for infectious disease transmission, and listed these in a reference database, describing their general characteristics. The diversity of disease-topics and overall publication frequency have increased over time (38 to 115 annual publications from 2006 to 2015). The inclusion of intervention strategies (8 to 52) and economic consequences (1 to 20) are increasing, to the detriment of purely theoretical explorations. Unfortunately, terminology used to describe IBMs is inconsistent and ambiguous. We retrieved 24 studies on a vaccine-preventable childhood disease (covering 7 different diseases), with publication frequency increasing from the first such study published in 2008. IBMs have been useful to explore heterogeneous between- and within-host interactions, but combined applications are still sparse. The amount of missing information on model characteristics and study design is remarkable., Conclusions: IBMs are suited to combine heterogeneous within- and between-host interactions, which offers many opportunities, especially to analyze targeted interventions for endemic infections. We advocate the exchange of (open-source) platforms and stress the need for consistent "branding". Using (existing) conventions and reporting protocols would stimulate cross-fertilization between research groups and fields, and ultimately policy making in decades to come.
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- 2017
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29. Quality-of-life: a many-splendored thing? Belgian population norms and 34 potential determinants explored by beta regression.
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Bilcke J, Hens N, and Beutels P
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Belgium, Female, Health Status, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult, Pain Measurement methods, Quality of Life psychology, Visual Analog Scale
- Abstract
Purpose: To identify determinants of health-related quality-of-life in the Belgian population and to provide age-specific population norms of health-related quality-of-life., Methods: Between September 2010 and February 2011, a representative sample of 1774 persons (age 0-99) was surveyed using the standard Euroqol questionnaire (EQ-5D-3L) with a Visual Analogue Scale (VAS). Significant determinants were identified using multivariate beta (VAS) and one-inflated beta (EQ-5D) regression, the latter modelling the probability to be in perfect health separately from the average EQ-5D score if not in perfect health., Results: Health-related quality-of-life depends largely on age and experience with severe disease. The probability to be in perfect health is highest for children. For 0-2 years children who are not in perfect health, proxies report EQ-5D and VAS scores as low as that of the elderly. Also smoking behaviour, educational attainment, pet ownership, working or having worked in health care, and potentially household size and 60+ living on their own (yes/no) are associated with health-related quality-of-life, whereas no association was found with gender, living in a single-parent home, educational attainment of mothers, alcohol consumption of 60+, having (grand-) children and the frequency of seeing them. The same determinants are significant for VAS and the probability to be in perfect health, but not for the average EQ-5D score if not in perfect health., Conclusions: The population norms provided can be used directly as input in health economic evaluations. Estimating health-related quality-of-life in children and developing statistical tools capturing the particular features of health-related quality-of-life measures are important areas for future research.
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- 2017
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30. Cost-effectiveness analysis of typhoid conjugate vaccines in five endemic low- and middle-income settings.
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Antillón M, Bilcke J, Paltiel AD, and Pitzer VE
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Child, Child, Preschool, Cohort Studies, Developing Countries, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, Middle Aged, Typhoid-Paratyphoid Vaccines administration & dosage, Urban Population, Vaccines, Conjugate administration & dosage, Vaccines, Conjugate economics, Vaccines, Conjugate immunology, Young Adult, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Typhoid Fever economics, Typhoid Fever prevention & control, Typhoid-Paratyphoid Vaccines economics, Typhoid-Paratyphoid Vaccines immunology
- Abstract
Background: Typhoid fever remains endemic in low- and middle-income countries. Programmatic use of existing vaccines is limited, but upcoming typhoid conjugate vaccines (TCVs) could warrant wider use. We evaluated the cost-effectiveness of five TCV delivery strategies in three urban areas (Delhi and Kolkata, India and Nairobi, Kenya) and two rural settings (Lwak, Kenya and Dong Thap, Vietnam) with varying incidence., Methods and Findings: We evaluated routine infant vaccination with and without catch-up campaigns among older individuals. We used a dynamic model of typhoid transmission to simulate cases, hospitalizations, deaths, disability-adjusted life-years (DALY) lost, treatment and intervention costs. We estimated cost-effectiveness (in terms of cost in international dollars (I$) per DALY averted) from the healthcare payer perspective, and assessed how it was influenced by uncertain model parameters. Compared to no vaccination, routine infant vaccination at I$1/dose was cost-saving in Delhi and Dong Thap, "very cost-effective" in Kolkata and Nairobi, and "cost-effective" in Lwak according to World Health Organization thresholds. However, routine vaccination was not the optimal strategy compared to strategies that included a catch-up campaign, which yielded the highest probability of being cost-saving in Delhi and Dong Thap and were most likely to provide a return on investment above a willingness-to-pay threshold of I$1440 in Kolkata, I$2300 in Nairobi, and I$5360 in Lwak. Vaccine price impacted the optimal strategy, and the number of doses required and rate of hospitalization were the primary sources of uncertainty., Conclusion: Routine vaccination with TCV would be cost-effective in most settings, and additional one-time catch-up campaigns would also be economically justified., (Copyright © 2017. Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
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- 2017
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31. Sustained low rotavirus activity and hospitalisation rates in the post-vaccination era in Belgium, 2007 to 2014.
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Sabbe M, Berger N, Blommaert A, Ogunjimi B, Grammens T, Callens M, Van Herck K, Beutels P, Van Damme P, and Bilcke J
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- Belgium epidemiology, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Gastroenteritis virology, Hospital Mortality, Humans, Immunization Programs statistics & numerical data, Incidence, Infant, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Risk Factors, Rotavirus isolation & purification, Rotavirus Infections virology, Survival Rate, Treatment Outcome, Viral Load, Gastroenteritis mortality, Gastroenteritis prevention & control, Hospitalization statistics & numerical data, Rotavirus Infections mortality, Rotavirus Infections prevention & control, Rotavirus Vaccines administration & dosage
- Abstract
In 2006, Belgium was the first country in the European Union to recommend rotavirus vaccination in the routine infant vaccination schedule and rapidly achieved high vaccine uptake (86-89% in 2007). We used regional and national data sources up to 7 years post-vaccination to study the impact of vaccination on laboratory-confirmed rotavirus cases and rotavirus-related hospitalisations and deaths. We showed that (i) from 2007 until 2013, vaccination coverage remained at 79-88% for a complete course, (ii) in children 0-2 years, rotavirus cases decreased by 79% (95% confidence intervals (CI): 68--89%) in 2008-2014 compared to the pre-vaccination period (1999--2006) and by 50% (95% CI: 14-82%) in the age group ≥ 10 years, (iii) hospitalisations for rotavirus gastroenteritis decreased by 87% (95% CI: 84-90%) in 2008--2012 compared to the pre-vaccination period (2002--2006), (iv) median age of rotavirus cases increased from 12 months to 17 months and (v) the rotavirus seasonal peak was reduced and delayed in all post-vaccination years. The substantial decline in rotavirus gastroenteritis requiring hospitalisations and in rotavirus activity following introduction of rotavirus vaccination is sustained over time and more pronounced in the target age group, but with evidence of herd immunity., (This article is copyright of The Authors, 2016.)
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- 2016
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32. The cost-effectiveness of pneumococcal vaccination in healthy adults over 50: An exploration of influential factors for Belgium.
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Blommaert A, Bilcke J, Willem L, Verhaegen J, Goossens H, and Beutels P
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Belgium, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Humans, Middle Aged, Models, Theoretical, Pneumococcal Vaccines economics, Pneumococcal Infections prevention & control, Pneumococcal Vaccines therapeutic use, Vaccination economics
- Abstract
Background: A recent trial demonstrated the 13 valent conjugate pneumococcal vaccine (PCV13) to be effective against invasive and non-invasive pneumococcal disease in healthy adults. PCV13 might therefore be considered as an alternative to the 23 valent polysaccharide vaccine (PPV23)., Aim: To explore the cost-effectiveness of vaccinating healthy adults over 50, with either PCV13 or PPV23 alone, or with a combined strategy using both PCV13 and PPV23., Methods: A static multi-cohort model was developed simulating the consequences of pneumococcal vaccination in adults over 50 from a health care payer's perspective, for different scenarios of duration of vaccine protection and serotype evolution., Results: At currently expected prices, PCV13 vaccination of healthy adults over 50 is unlikely to be cost-effective either compared with no vaccination or in combination with PPV23 versus PPV23 only., Conclusion: Further research is needed on vaccine efficacy of the combination strategy and of risk groups, as well as the duration of vaccine protection. Serotype evolutions under the influence of the childhood PCV program should be closely monitored., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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33. Methods for Health Economic Evaluation of Vaccines and Immunization Decision Frameworks: A Consensus Framework from a European Vaccine Economics Community.
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Ultsch B, Damm O, Beutels P, Bilcke J, Brüggenjürgen B, Gerber-Grote A, Greiner W, Hanquet G, Hutubessy R, Jit M, Knol M, von Kries R, Kuhlmann A, Levy-Bruhl D, Perleth M, Postma M, Salo H, Siebert U, Wasem J, and Wichmann O
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- Europe, Humans, Cost-Benefit Analysis methods, Cost-Benefit Analysis standards, Decision Making, Immunization economics, Models, Economic, Vaccines economics
- Abstract
Background: Incremental cost-effectiveness and cost-utility analyses [health economic evaluations (HEEs)] of vaccines are routinely considered in decision making on immunization in various industrialized countries. While guidelines advocating more standardization of such HEEs (mainly for curative drugs) exist, several immunization-specific aspects (e.g. indirect effects or discounting approach) are still a subject of debate within the scientific community., Objective: The objective of this study was to develop a consensus framework for HEEs of vaccines to support the development of national guidelines in Europe., Methods: A systematic literature review was conducted to identify prevailing issues related to HEEs of vaccines. Furthermore, European experts in the field of health economics and immunization decision making were nominated and asked to select relevant aspects for discussion. Based on this, a workshop was held with these experts. Aspects on 'mathematical modelling', 'health economics' and 'decision making' were debated in group-work sessions (GWS) to formulate recommendations and/or--if applicable--to state 'pros' and 'contras'., Results: A total of 13 different aspects were identified for modelling and HEE: model selection, time horizon of models, natural disease history, measures of vaccine-induced protection, duration of vaccine-induced protection, indirect effects apart from herd protection, target population, model calibration and validation, handling uncertainty, discounting, health-related quality of life, cost components, and perspectives. For decision making, there were four aspects regarding the purpose and the integration of HEEs of vaccines in decision making as well as the variation of parameters within uncertainty analyses and the reporting of results from HEEs. For each aspect, background information and an expert consensus were formulated., Conclusions: There was consensus that when HEEs are used to prioritize healthcare funding, this should be done in a consistent way across all interventions, including vaccines. However, proper evaluation of vaccines implies using tools that are not commonly used for therapeutic drugs. Due to the complexity of and uncertainties around vaccination, transparency in the documentation of HEEs and during subsequent decision making is essential.
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- 2016
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34. Did Large-Scale Vaccination Drive Changes in the Circulating Rotavirus Population in Belgium?
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Pitzer VE, Bilcke J, Heylen E, Crawford FW, Callens M, De Smet F, Van Ranst M, Zeller M, and Matthijnssens J
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- Belgium, Genotype, Humans, Models, Theoretical, Rotavirus Infections virology, Rotavirus pathogenicity, Rotavirus Infections epidemiology, Rotavirus Vaccines therapeutic use, Vaccination
- Abstract
Vaccination can place selective pressures on viral populations, leading to changes in the distribution of strains as viruses evolve to escape immunity from the vaccine. Vaccine-driven strain replacement is a major concern after nationwide rotavirus vaccine introductions. However, the distribution of the predominant rotavirus genotypes varies from year to year in the absence of vaccination, making it difficult to determine what changes can be attributed to the vaccines. To gain insight in the underlying dynamics driving changes in the rotavirus population, we fitted a hierarchy of mathematical models to national and local genotype-specific hospitalization data from Belgium, where large-scale vaccination was introduced in 2006. We estimated that natural- and vaccine-derived immunity was strongest against completely homotypic strains and weakest against fully heterotypic strains, with an intermediate immunity amongst partially heterotypic strains. The predominance of G2P[4] infections in Belgium after vaccine introduction can be explained by a combination of natural genotype fluctuations and weaker natural and vaccine-induced immunity against infection with strains heterotypic to the vaccine, in the absence of significant variation in strain-specific vaccine effectiveness against disease. However, the incidence of rotavirus gastroenteritis is predicted to remain low despite vaccine-driven changes in the distribution of genotypes.
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- 2015
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35. Environmental triggers of acute myocardial infarction: results of a nationwide multiple-factorial population study.
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Claeys MJ, Coenen S, Colpaert C, Bilcke J, Beutels P, Wouters K, Legrand V, Van Damme P, and Vrints C
- Subjects
- Aged, Belgium epidemiology, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Incidence, Male, Middle Aged, Myocardial Infarction epidemiology, Myocardial Infarction surgery, Percutaneous Coronary Intervention methods, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Survival Rate trends, Electrocardiography, Environmental Exposure adverse effects, Myocardial Infarction etiology, Population Surveillance methods, Risk Assessment methods
- Abstract
Objective: The objective of this study was to study the independent environmental triggers of ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) in a multifactorial environmental population model., Methods and Results: Daily counts of all STEMI patients who underwent urgent percutaneous coronary intervention over the period 2006-2009 in Belgium were associated with average daily meteorological data and influenza-like illness incidence data. The following meteorological measures were investigated: particulate matter less than 10 μM (PM10) and less than 2.5 μM (PM(2.5)), ozone, black smoke, temperature and relative humidity. During the study period a total of 15,964 STEMI patients (mean age 63, 75% male) were admitted with a daily average admission rate of 11 ± 4 patients. A multivariate Poisson regression analysis showed that only the temperature was significantly correlated with STEMI, with an 8% increase in the risk of STEMI for each 10°C decrease in temperature (adjusted incidence risk ratio (IRR) 0.92, 95% CI 0.89-0.96). The effects of temperature were consistent among several subpopulations but the strongest effect was seen in diabetic patients (IRR 0.85, 95% CI 0.78 -0.95). There was a trend for an incremental risk of STEMI for each 10 μg/m³ PM(2.5) increase and during influenza epidemics with IRR of 1.02 (95% CI 1.00-1.04) and 1.07 (95% CI 0.98-1.16), respectively., Conclusion: In a global environmental model, low temperature is the most important environmental trigger for STEMI, whereas air pollution and influenza epidemics only seem to have a modest effect.
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- 2015
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36. Quantifying Parameter and Structural Uncertainty of Dynamic Disease Transmission Models Using MCMC: An Application to Rotavirus Vaccination in England and Wales.
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Bilcke J, Chapman R, Atchison C, Cromer D, Johnson H, Willem L, Cox M, Edmunds WJ, and Jit M
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Child, Preschool, Cost-Benefit Analysis, England epidemiology, Humans, Infant, Markov Chains, Rotavirus immunology, Vaccines, Attenuated, Wales epidemiology, Young Adult, Models, Biological, Rotavirus Infections epidemiology, Rotavirus Infections prevention & control, Rotavirus Infections transmission, Rotavirus Vaccines therapeutic use, Uncertainty
- Abstract
Background: Two vaccines (Rotarix and RotaTeq) are highly effective at preventing severe rotavirus disease. Rotavirus vaccination has been introduced in the United Kingdom and other countries partly based on modeling and cost-effectiveness results. However, most of these models fail to account for the uncertainty about several vaccine characteristics and the mechanism of vaccine action., Methods: A deterministic dynamic transmission model of rotavirus vaccination in the United Kingdom was developed. This improves on previous models by 1) allowing for 2 different mechanisms of action for Rotarix and RotaTeq, 2) using clinical trial data to understand these mechanisms, and 3) accounting for uncertainty by using Markov Chain Monte Carlo., Results: In the long run, Rotarix and RotaTeq are predicted to reduce the overall rotavirus incidence by 50% (39%-63%) and 44% (30%-62%), respectively but with an increase in incidence in primary school children and adults up to 25 y of age. The vaccines are estimated to give more protection than 1 or 2 natural infections. The duration of protection is highly uncertain but has only impact on the predicted reduction in rotavirus burden for values lower than 10 y. The 2 vaccine mechanism structures fit equally well with the clinical trial data. Long-term postvaccination dynamics cannot be predicted reliably with the data available., Conclusion: Accounting for the joint uncertainty of several vaccine characteristics resulted in more insight into which of these are crucial for determining the impact of rotavirus vaccination. Data for up to at least 10 y postvaccination and covering older children and adults are crucial to address remaining questions on the impact of widespread rotavirus vaccination., (© The Author(s) 2015.)
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- 2015
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37. Herpes zoster is associated with herpes simplex and other infections in under 60 year-olds.
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Ogunjimi B, Buntinx F, Bartholomeeusen S, Terpstra I, De Haes I, Willem L, Elli S, Bilcke J, Van Damme P, Coenen S, and Beutels P
- Subjects
- Case-Control Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Risk Factors, Herpes Simplex complications, Herpes Simplex epidemiology, Herpes Zoster complications, Herpes Zoster epidemiology
- Abstract
Objectives: We assessed the association between herpes zoster (HZ) and herpes simplex (HS) occurrence whilst controlling for risk factors of HZ., Methods: Using a Belgian general practitioner network, a retrospective cohort study with 3736 HZ patients and 14,076 age-gender-practice matched controls was performed, covering over 1.5 million patient-years. Multiple logistic regression was used with HZ as outcome and several diagnoses (malignancy, depression, diabetes mellitus, auto-immune diseases, asthma, multiple sclerosis, HIV, fractures), medications (systemic corticosteroids, biologicals, vaccination), HS and other infections as variables., Results: HS was significantly associated with HZ for all analysed time intervals (up to five years) post HZ (OR of 3.51 [2.09 5.88] 95%CI one year post HZ) and to a lesser extent for time ranges pre HZ. Registration of other infections was significantly associated with HZ in all time intervals pre and post HZ (OR up to 1.37). Malignancy up to five years pre HZ, depression up to one year pre or post HZ, fractures up to two years pre HZ, asthma, auto-immune diseases, and immunosuppressive medication one year pre or post HZ were also associated with HZ., Conclusions: HZ and HS occurrences are significantly associated and potentially share a common susceptibility beyond the known risk factors., (Copyright © 2014 The British Infection Association. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2015
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38. Methods for Health Economic Evaluations of Vaccines - Results from an International Expert-Workshop.
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Ultsch B, Damm O, Beutels P, Bilcke J, Brüggenjürgen B, Gerber-Grote AU, Greiner W, Hanquet G, Harder T, Hutubessy R, Jit M, Knol M, Kuhlmann A, von Kries R, Levy-Bruhl D, Perleth M, Postma MJ, Salo H, Siebert U, Wasem J, Weidemann F, and Wichmann O
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- 2014
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39. Cost-effectiveness of seasonal influenza vaccination in pregnant women, health care workers and persons with underlying illnesses in Belgium.
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Blommaert A, Bilcke J, Vandendijck Y, Hanquet G, Hens N, and Beutels P
- Subjects
- Belgium, Female, Health Services Needs and Demand, Humans, Models, Economic, Pregnancy, Quality-Adjusted Life Years, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Health Personnel, Influenza Vaccines therapeutic use, Influenza, Human prevention & control, Vaccination economics
- Abstract
Risk groups with increased vulnerability for influenza complications such as pregnant women, persons with underlying illnesses as well as persons who come into contact with them, such as health care workers, are currently given priority (along with other classic target groups) to receive seasonal influenza vaccination in Belgium. We aimed to evaluate this policy from a health care payer perspective by cost-effectiveness analysis in the three specific target groups above, while accounting for effects beyond the target group. Increasing the coverage of influenza vaccination is likely to be cost-effective for pregnant women (median €6589 per quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) gained [€4073-€10,249]) and health care workers (median €24,096/QALY gained [€16,442-€36,342]), if this can be achieved without incurring additional administration costs. Assuming an additional physician's consult is charged to administer each additional vaccine dose, the cost-effectiveness of vaccinating pregnant women depends strongly on the extent of its impact on the neonate's health. For health care workers, the assumed number of preventable secondary infections has a strong influence on the cost-effectiveness. Vaccinating people with underlying illnesses is likely highly cost-effective above 50 years of age and borderline cost-effective for younger persons, depending on relative life expectancy and vaccine efficacy in this risk group compared to the general population. The case-fatality ratios of the target group, of the secondary affected groups and vaccine efficacy are key sources of uncertainty., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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40. Cost-effectiveness of socioeconomic support as part of HIV care for the poor in an urban community-based antiretroviral program in Uganda.
- Author
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Stella-Talisuna A, Bilcke J, Colebunders R, and Beutels P
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Cohort Studies, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Female, Food Supply economics, Health Education economics, Humans, Male, Treatment Outcome, Uganda, Urban Population, Financial Support, HIV Infections drug therapy, Social Support
- Abstract
Background: Socioeconomic support reduced nonretention in a community-based antiretroviral therapy (ART) program in Uganda. However, resource implications of expanding socioeconomic support are large, and cost-effectiveness analysis can inform budget priorities. We compared the incremental benefits and costs of providing education, food, or both forms of support (dual support) with existing ART services from a health care provider's perspective., Methods: Costs and outcome data were collected from a cohort of 2371 adult patients with HIV receiving education, food, or dual support from Reach Out Mbuya between 2004 and 2010. The primary outcome was averted loss to follow-up. The number of follow-up days was calculated for each patient along with accrued service and fixed program costs for the alternative forms of socioeconomic support in USD by standard costing methods. The socioeconomic support types were compared incrementally over the study period., Results: After 7 years, 762 (33%) of the patients were loss to follow-up with 42% of them receiving food. In the presence of providing ART, education support was less costly and more effective than the alternatives. The average unit cost for education, food, and dual support were $237, $538, and $776, respectively. The average total annual costs were $88,643 for education, $538,005 for food, and $103,045 for dual support., Conclusions: Compared with food or dual support, investing in education of the children of ART patients is less costly and more effective in improving patient retention. Reach Out Mbuya should embrace this paradigm shift and channel its resources more efficiently and effectively by focusing on education support.
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- 2014
- Full Text
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41. Influenza-like-illness and clinically diagnosed flu: disease burden, costs and quality of life for patients seeking ambulatory care or no professional care at all.
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Bilcke J, Coenen S, and Beutels P
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Belgium, Child, Female, Humans, Influenza Vaccines immunology, Influenza, Human drug therapy, Influenza, Human virology, Male, Middle Aged, Patient Acceptance of Health Care, Surveys and Questionnaires, Vaccination, Young Adult, Ambulatory Care statistics & numerical data, Cost of Illness, Influenza, Human diagnosis, Quality of Life
- Abstract
This is one of the first studies to (1) describe the out-of-hospital burden of influenza-like-illness (ILI) and clinically diagnosed flu, also for patients not seeking professional medical care, (2) assess influential background characteristics, and (3) formally compare the burden of ILI in patients with and without a clinical diagnosis of flu. A general population sample with recent ILI experience was recruited during the 2011-2012 influenza season in Belgium. Half of the 2250 respondents sought professional medical care, reported more symptoms (especially more often fever), a longer duration of illness, more use of medication (especially antibiotics) and a higher direct medical cost than patients not seeking medical care. The disease and economic burden were similar for ambulatory ILI patients, irrespective of whether they received a clinical diagnosis of flu. On average, they experienced 5-6 symptoms over a 6-day period; required 1.6 physician visits and 86-91% took medication. An average episode amounted to €51-€53 in direct medical costs, 4 days of absence from work or school and the loss of 0.005 quality-adjusted life-years. Underlying illness led to greater costs and lower quality-of-life. The costs of ILI patients with clinically diagnosed flu tended to increase, while those of ILI patients without clinically diagnosed flu tended to decrease with age. Recently vaccinated persons experienced lower costs and a higher quality-of-life, but this was only the case for patients not seeking professional medical care. This information can be used directly to evaluate the implementation of cost-effective prevention and control measures for influenza. In particular to inform the evaluation of more widespread seasonal influenza vaccination, including in children, which is currently considered by many countries.
- Published
- 2014
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- View/download PDF
42. Influence of frequent infectious exposures on general and varicella-zoster virus-specific immune responses in pediatricians.
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Ogunjimi B, Smits E, Heynderickx S, Van den Bergh J, Bilcke J, Jansens H, Malfait R, Ramet J, Maecker HT, Cools N, Beutels P, and Van Damme P
- Subjects
- Adenoviruses, Human immunology, Adult, Antibodies, Bacterial blood, Cytokines metabolism, Cytomegalovirus immunology, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Tetanus Toxin immunology, Antibodies, Viral blood, Herpesvirus 3, Human immunology, Occupational Exposure, Physicians, T-Lymphocytes immunology
- Abstract
Reexposure to viruses is assumed to strengthen humoral and cellular immunity via the secondary immune response. We studied the effects of frequent exposure to viral infectious challenges on immunity. Furthermore, we assessed whether repetitive exposures to varicella-zoster virus (VZV) elicited persistently high immune responses. Blood samples from 11 pediatricians and matched controls were assessed at 3 time points and 1 time point, respectively. Besides the assessment of general immunity by means of measuring T-cell subset percentages, antibody titers and gamma interferon (IFN-γ)/interleukin 2 (IL-2)-producing T-cell percentages against adenovirus type 5 (AdV-5), cytomegalovirus (CMV), tetanus toxin (TT), and VZV were determined. Pediatricians had lower levels of circulating CD4(+)-naive T cells and showed boosting of CD8(+) effector memory T cells. Although no effect on humoral immunity was seen, repetitive exposures to VZV induced persistently higher percentages of IFN-γ-positive T cells against all VZV antigens tested (VZV glycoprotein E [gE], VZV intermediate-early protein 62 [IE62], and VZV IE63) than in controls. T cells directed against latency-associated VZV IE63 benefitted the most from natural exogenous boosting. Although no differences in cellular or humoral immunity were found between the pediatricians and controls for AdV-5 or TT, we did find larger immune responses against CMV antigens in pediatricians. Despite the high infectious burden, we detected a robust and diverse immune system in pediatricians. Repetitive exposures to VZV have been shown to induce a stable increased level of VZV-specific cellular but not humoral immunity. Based on our observations, VZV IE63 can be considered a candidate for a zoster vaccine.
- Published
- 2014
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43. Childhood varicella-zoster virus vaccination in Belgium: cost-effective only in the long run or without exogenous boosting?
- Author
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Bilcke J, van Hoek AJ, and Beutels P
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Belgium epidemiology, Chickenpox epidemiology, Chickenpox Vaccine administration & dosage, Child, Child, Preschool, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Female, Herpes Zoster epidemiology, Humans, Infant, Male, Middle Aged, Vaccination economics, Young Adult, Chickenpox economics, Chickenpox prevention & control, Chickenpox Vaccine economics, Chickenpox Vaccine immunology, Herpes Zoster economics, Herpes Zoster prevention & control, Vaccination methods
- Abstract
Aim: To assess the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of a universal childhood varicella-zoster vaccination programme in Belgium (1) using the most recent Belgian data on varicella-zoster burden, (2) exploring different options for the timing of the second dose, (3) obtaining results with and without exogenous natural boosting, and (4) investigating the possible additional benefit of zoster booster vaccination for adults at age 50 or 60 y., Methods: An extensively studied and improved dynamic model is used to estimate primary and breakthrough chickenpox and zoster cases over time. For a range of vaccination options, we compared the direct costs (health care payer perspective) and health outcomes (including Quality-Adjusted Life-Years (QALYs) lost) associated with chickenpox and herpes zoster. Estimates of social contact patterns, health care use, costs and QALY losses are almost exclusively based on Belgian databases and surveys., Results and Conclusions: If exogenous natural boosting exists, a net loss in QALYs is expected for several decades after implementing a universal chickenpox vaccination programme, due to an increase in zoster mainly in persons aged 50-80 y. This result holds also for scenarios that minimise or counteract the expected increase in zoster incidence (e.g. additional booster vaccinations in adults). However, if the boosting hypothesis is not true or if costs and QALYs are cumulated over at least 33 to more than 100 y after vaccination (depending on the assumptions made), different options for universal 2-dose vaccination against chickenpox in Belgium would be cost-effective at a vaccine price of €43/dose or lower.
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- 2013
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44. The health and economic burden of chickenpox and herpes zoster in Belgium.
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Bilcke J, Ogunjimi B, Marais C, de Smet F, Callens M, Callaert K, van Kerschaver E, Ramet J, van Damme P, and Beutels P
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Ambulatory Care economics, Ambulatory Care statistics & numerical data, Belgium epidemiology, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Health Care Costs statistics & numerical data, Health Care Surveys, Health Surveys, Hospitalization economics, Hospitalization statistics & numerical data, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Middle Aged, Quality of Life, Quality-Adjusted Life Years, Severity of Illness Index, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult, Chickenpox economics, Chickenpox mortality, Chickenpox therapy, Cost of Illness, Herpes Zoster economics, Herpes Zoster mortality, Herpes Zoster therapy
- Abstract
Varicella-zoster virus causes chickenpox (CP) and after reactivation herpes zoster (HZ). Vaccines are available against both diseases warranting an assessment of the pre-vaccination burden of disease. We collected data from relevant Belgian databases and performed five surveys of CP and HZ patients. The rates at which a general practitioner is visited at least once for CP and HZ are 346 and 378/100 000 person-years, respectively. The average CP and HZ hospitalization rates are 5·3 and 14·2/100 000 person-years respectively. The direct medical cost for HZ is about twice as large as the direct medical cost for CP. The quality-adjusted life years lost for ambulatory CP patients consulting a physician is more than double that of those not consulting a physician (0·010 vs. 0·004). In conclusion, both diseases cause a substantial burden in Belgium.
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- 2012
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45. Detection of human papillomavirus DNA in urine. A review of the literature.
- Author
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Vorsters A, Micalessi I, Bilcke J, Ieven M, Bogers J, and Van Damme P
- Subjects
- Clinical Laboratory Techniques methods, DNA, Viral genetics, Humans, Mass Screening methods, Papillomaviridae isolation & purification, Virology methods, DNA, Viral isolation & purification, Papillomaviridae genetics, Papillomavirus Infections diagnosis, Papillomavirus Infections virology, Urine virology
- Abstract
The detection of human papillomavirus (HPV) DNA in urine, a specimen easily obtained by a non-invasive self-sampling method, has been the subject of a considerable number of studies. This review provides an overview of 41 published studies; assesses how different methods and settings may contribute to the sometimes contradictory outcomes; and discusses the potential relevance of using urine samples in vaccine trials, disease surveillance, epidemiological studies, and specific settings of cervical cancer screening. Urine sampling, storage conditions, sample preparation, DNA extraction, and DNA amplification may all have an important impact on HPV DNA detection and the form of viral DNA that is detected. Possible trends in HPV DNA prevalence in urine could be inferred from the presence of risk factors or the diagnosis of cervical lesions. HPV DNA detection in urine is feasible and may become a useful tool but necessitates further improvement and standardization.
- Published
- 2012
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46. Estimating the age-specific duration of herpes zoster vaccine protection: a matter of model choice?
- Author
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Bilcke J, Ogunjimi B, Hulstaert F, Van Damme P, Hens N, and Beutels P
- Subjects
- Age Factors, Humans, Time Factors, Herpes Zoster prevention & control, Herpes Zoster Vaccine immunology, Models, Statistical
- Abstract
Introduction: The estimation of herpes zoster (HZ) vaccine efficacy by time since vaccination and age at vaccination is crucial to assess the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of HZ vaccination. Published estimates for the duration of protection from the vaccine diverge substantially, although based on data from the same trial for a follow-up period of 5 years. Different models were used to obtain these estimates, but it is unclear which of these models is most appropriate (if any). Only one study estimated vaccine efficacy by age at vaccination and time since vaccination combined. Recently, data became available from the same trial for a follow-up period of 7 years., Aim and Methods: We aim to elaborate on estimating HZ vaccine efficacy (1) by estimating it as a function of time since vaccination and age at vaccination, (2) by comparing the fits of a range of models, and (3) by fitting these models on data for a follow-up period of 5 and 7 years., Results: Although the models' fit to data are very comparable, they differ substantially in how they estimate vaccine efficacy to change as a function of time since vaccination and age at vaccination., Discussion: An accurate estimation of HZ vaccine efficacy by time since vaccination and age at vaccination is hampered by the lack of insight in the biological processes underlying HZ vaccine protection, and by the fact that such data are currently not available in sufficient detail. Uncertainty about the choice of model to estimate this important parameter should be acknowledged in cost-effectiveness analyses., (Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2012
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47. The cost-effectiveness of varicella and combined varicella and herpes zoster vaccination programmes in the United Kingdom.
- Author
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van Hoek AJ, Melegaro A, Gay N, Bilcke J, and Edmunds WJ
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Chickenpox epidemiology, Chickenpox Vaccine immunology, Child, Child, Preschool, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Female, Herpes Zoster epidemiology, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Middle Aged, United Kingdom epidemiology, Vaccination economics, Young Adult, Chickenpox prevention & control, Chickenpox Vaccine administration & dosage, Chickenpox Vaccine economics, Herpes Zoster prevention & control, Models, Statistical
- Abstract
Background: Despite the existence of varicella vaccine, many developed countries have not introduced it into their national schedules, partly because of concerns about whether herpes zoster (HZ, shingles) will increase due to a lack of exogenous boosting. The magnitude of any increase in zoster that might occur is dependent on rates at which adults and children mix - something that has only recently been quantified - and could be reduced by simultaneously vaccinating older individuals against shingles. This study is the first to assess the cost-effectiveness of combined varicella and zoster vaccination options and compare this to alternative programmes., Methods and Findings: The cost-effectiveness of various options for the use of varicella-zoster virus (VZV) containing vaccines was explored using a transmission dynamic model. Underlying contact rates are estimated from a contemporary survey of social mixing patterns, and uncertainty in these derived from bootstrapping the original sample. The model was calibrated to UK data on varicella and zoster incidence. Other parameters were taken from the literature. UK guidance on perspective and discount rates were followed. The results of the incremental cost-effectiveness analysis suggest that a combined policy is cost-effective. However, the cost-effectiveness of this policy (and indeed the childhood two-dose policy) is influenced by projected benefits that accrue many decades (80-100 years or more) after the start of vaccination. If the programme is evaluated over shorter time frames, then it would be unlikely to be deemed cost-effective, and may result in declines in population health, due to a projected rise in the incidence of HZ. The findings are also sensitive to a number of parameters that are inaccurately quantified, such as the risk of HZ in varicella vaccine responders., Conclusions: Policy makers should be aware of the potential negative benefits in the first 30-50 years after introduction of a childhood varicella vaccine. This can only be partly mitigated by the introduction of a herpes zoster vaccine. They have to decide how they value the potential benefits beyond this time to consider childhood vaccination cost effective., (Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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48. Cost-effectiveness of vaccination against herpes zoster in adults aged over 60 years in Belgium.
- Author
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Bilcke J, Marais C, Ogunjimi B, Willem L, Hens N, and Beutels P
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Belgium epidemiology, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Female, Herpes Zoster epidemiology, Herpes Zoster Vaccine immunology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Models, Statistical, Herpes Zoster economics, Herpes Zoster prevention & control, Herpes Zoster Vaccine administration & dosage, Herpes Zoster Vaccine economics, Vaccination economics
- Abstract
Aim: To assess the cost-effectiveness of vaccinating all or subgroups of adults aged 60 to 85 years against herpes zoster., Methods: A deterministic compartmental static model was developed (in freeware R), in which cohorts can acquire herpes zoster according to their age in years. Surveys and database analyses were conducted to obtain as much as possible Belgian age-specific estimates for input parameters. Direct costs and Quality-Adjusted Life-Year (QALY) losses were estimated as a function of standardised Severity Of Illness (SOI) scores (i.e. as a function of the duration and severity of herpes zoster disease)., Results: Uncertainty about the average SOI score for a person with herpes zoster, the duration of protection from the vaccine, and the population that can benefit from the vaccine, exerts a major impact on the results: under assumptions least in favour of vaccination, vaccination is not cost-effective (i.e. incremental cost per QALY gained >€48,000 for all ages considered) at the expected vaccine price of €90 per dose. At the same price, but under assumptions most in favour of vaccination, vaccination is found to be cost-effective (i.e. incremental cost per QALY gained <€5500 for all ages considered). Vaccination of age cohort 60 seems more cost-effective than vaccination of any older age cohort in Belgium., Discussion: If the vaccine price per dose drops to €45, HZ vaccination of adults aged 60-64 years is likely to be cost-effective in Belgium, even under assumptions least in favour of vaccination. Unlike previous studies, our analysis acknowledged major methodological and model uncertainties simultaneously and presented outcomes for 26 different target ages at which vaccination can be considered (ages 60-85)., (Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2012
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49. Accounting for methodological, structural, and parameter uncertainty in decision-analytic models: a practical guide.
- Author
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Bilcke J, Beutels P, Brisson M, and Jit M
- Subjects
- Models, Theoretical, Decision Support Techniques, Uncertainty
- Abstract
Unlabelled: Accounting for uncertainty is now a standard part of decision-analytic modeling and is recommended by many health technology agencies and published guidelines. However, the scope of such analyses is often limited, even though techniques have been developed for presenting the effects of methodological, structural, and parameter uncertainty on model results. To help bring these techniques into mainstream use, the authors present a step-by-step guide that offers an integrated approach to account for different kinds of uncertainty in the same model, along with a checklist for assessing the way in which uncertainty has been incorporated. The guide also addresses special situations such as when a source of uncertainty is difficult to parameterize, resources are limited for an ideal exploration of uncertainty, or evidence to inform the model is not available or not reliable., Methods: for identifying the sources of uncertainty that influence results most are also described. Besides guiding analysts, the guide and checklist may be useful to decision makers who need to assess how well uncertainty has been accounted for in a decision-analytic model before using the results to make a decision.
- Published
- 2011
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50. An update to "The cost-effectiveness of rotavirus vaccination: comparative analyses for five European countries and transferability in Europe".
- Author
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Jit M, Mangen MJ, Melliez H, Yazdanpanah Y, Bilcke J, Salo H, Edmunds WJ, and Beutels P
- Subjects
- Cost of Illness, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Europe epidemiology, Gastroenteritis economics, Gastroenteritis epidemiology, Gastroenteritis prevention & control, Gastroenteritis virology, Humans, Models, Economic, Rotavirus Infections economics, Rotavirus Infections epidemiology, Rotavirus Infections prevention & control, Rotavirus Vaccines economics, Vaccination economics
- Abstract
A cost-effectiveness analysis of rotavirus vaccination in Belgium, England and Wales, Finland, France and the Netherlands published in 2009 was updated based on recent studies on rotavirus burden of disease and vaccine efficacy. All the qualitative conclusions in the previous study were found to remain valid. Vaccination remains cost-effective in Finland only when using plausible tender prices., (Copyright © 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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