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Cost-effectiveness of active surveillance versus hemithyroidectomy for micropapillary thyroid cancer.

Authors :
Venkatesh S
Pasternak JD
Beninato T
Drake FT
Kluijfhout WP
Liu C
Gosnell JE
Shen WT
Clark OH
Duh QY
Suh I
Source :
Surgery [Surgery] 2017 Jan; Vol. 161 (1), pp. 116-126. Date of Electronic Publication: 2016 Nov 10.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Background: The management of low-risk micropapillary thyroid cancer <1 cm in size has come into question, because recent data have shown that nonoperative active surveillance of micropapillary thyroid cancer is a viable alternative to hemithyroidectomy. We conducted a cost-effectiveness analysis to help decide between observation versus operation.<br />Methods: We constructed Markov models for active surveillance and hemithyroidectomy. The reference case was a 40-year-old patient with recently diagnosed, low-risk micropapillary thyroid cancer. Costs and health utilities were determined using extensive literature review. The willingness-to-pay threshold was set at $100,000/quality-adjusted life year gained. Deterministic and probabilistic sensitivity analyses were performed to account for uncertainty in the model's variables.<br />Results: Active surveillance is dominant (less expensive and more quality-adjusted life years) for a health utility <0.01 below that for disease-free, posthemithyroidectomy state, or for a remaining life expectancy of <2 years. For a utility difference ≥0.02, the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (the ratio of the difference in costs between active surveillance and hemithyroidectomy divided by the difference in quality-adjusted life years) for hemithyroidectomy is <$100,000/QALY gained and thus cost-effective. For a utility difference of 0.11-the reference case scenario-the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio for hemithyroidectomy is $4,437/quality-adjusted life year gained.<br />Conclusion: The cost-effectiveness of hemithyroidectomy is highly dependent on patient disutility associated with active surveillance. In patients who would associate nonoperative management with at least a modest decrement in quality of life, hemithyroidectomy is cost-effective.<br /> (Published by Elsevier Inc.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1532-7361
Volume :
161
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Surgery
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
27839930
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.surg.2016.06.076