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Transient elastography for screening of liver fibrosis: cost-effectiveness analysis from six prospective cohorts in Europe and Asia

Authors :
Paolo Angeli
Vincent Wai-Sun Wong
Carmen Expósito
Indra Neil Guha
Laurent Castera
Frank Lammert
Aleksander Krag
Pere Torán
Llorenç Caballería
Isabel Graupera
A Arslanow
Núria Fabrellas
Miquel Serra-Burriel
Rosario Hernández
Maja Thiele
David J. Harman
Peter R. Galle
Grace Lai-Hung Wong
Dominique Roulot
Sarwa Darwish Murad
Guillem Pera
Pere Ginès
Guruprasad P. Aithal
Gastroenterology & Hepatology
Source :
Journal of Hepatology, 71(6), 1141-1151. Elsevier, Journal of Hepatology, Serra-Burriel, M, Graupera, I, Torán, P, Thiele, M, Roulot, D, Wai-Sun Wong, V, Neil Guha, I, Fabrellas, N, Arslanow, A, Expósito, C, Hernández, R, Lai-Hung Wong, G, Harman, D, Darwish Murad, S, Krag, A, Pera, G, Angeli, P, Galle, P, Aithal, G P, Caballeria, L, Castera, L, Ginès, P, Lammert, F & investigators of the LiverScreen Consortium 2019, ' Transient elastography for screening of liver fibrosis : Cost-effectiveness analysis from six prospective cohorts in Europe and Asia ', Journal of Hepatology, vol. 71, no. 6, pp. 1141-1151 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhep.2019.08.019
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2019.

Abstract

Background & Aims: Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease and alcohol-related liver disease pose an important challenge to current clinical healthcare pathways because of the large number of at-risk patients. Therefore, we aimed to explore the cost-effectiveness of transient elastography (TE) as a screening method to detect liver fibrosis in a primary care pathway. Methods: Cost-effectiveness analysis was performed using real-life individual patient data from 6 independent prospective cohorts (5 from Europe and 1 from Asia). A diagnostic algorithm with conditional inference trees was developed to explore the relationships between liver stiffness, socio-demographics, comorbidities, and hepatic fibrosis, the latter assessed by fibrosis scores (FIB-4, NFS) and liver biopsies in a subset of 352 patients. We compared the incremental cost-effectiveness of a screening strategy against standard of care alongside the numbers needed to screen to diagnose a patient with fibrosis stage ≥F2. Results: The data set encompassed 6,295 participants (mean age 55 ± 12 years, BMI 27 ± 5 kg/m2, liver stiffness 5.6 ± 5.0 kPa). A 9.1 kPa TE cut-off provided the best accuracy for the diagnosis of significant fibrosis (≥F2) in general population settings, whereas a threshold of 9.5 kPa was optimal for populations at-risk of alcohol-related liver disease. TE with the proposed cut-offs outperformed fibrosis scores in terms of accuracy. Screening with TE was cost-effective with mean incremental cost-effectiveness ratios ranging from 2,570 €/QALY (95% CI 2,456–2,683) for a population at-risk of alcohol-related liver disease (age ≥45 years) to 6,217 €/QALY (95% CI 5,832–6,601) in the general population. Overall, there was a 12% chance of TE screening being cost saving across countries and populations. Conclusions: Screening for liver fibrosis with TE in primary care is a cost-effective intervention for European and Asian populations and may even be cost saving. Lay summary: The lack of optimized public health screening strategies for the detection of liver fibrosis in adults without known liver disease presents a major healthcare challenge. Analyses from 6 independent international cohorts, with transient elastography measurements, show that a community-based risk-stratification strategy for alcohol-related and non-alcoholic fatty liver diseases is cost-effective and potentially cost saving for our healthcare systems, as it leads to earlier identification of patients.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01688278
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Hepatology, 71(6), 1141-1151. Elsevier, Journal of Hepatology, Serra-Burriel, M, Graupera, I, Torán, P, Thiele, M, Roulot, D, Wai-Sun Wong, V, Neil Guha, I, Fabrellas, N, Arslanow, A, Expósito, C, Hernández, R, Lai-Hung Wong, G, Harman, D, Darwish Murad, S, Krag, A, Pera, G, Angeli, P, Galle, P, Aithal, G P, Caballeria, L, Castera, L, Ginès, P, Lammert, F & investigators of the LiverScreen Consortium 2019, ' Transient elastography for screening of liver fibrosis : Cost-effectiveness analysis from six prospective cohorts in Europe and Asia ', Journal of Hepatology, vol. 71, no. 6, pp. 1141-1151 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhep.2019.08.019
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7bf593d7a50b7aa3e0ae3af85cad77ce