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Cost-effectiveness and budget impact of decentralising childhood tuberculosis diagnosis in six high tuberculosis incidence countries: a mathematical modelling study

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Authors

d'Elbée, Marc; Harker, Martin; Mafirakureva, Nyashadzaishe; Nanfuka, Mastula; Huyen Ton Nu Nguyet, Minh; Taguebue, Jean-Voisin; Moh, Raoul; Khosa, Celso; Mustapha, Ayeshatu; Mwanga-Amumpere, Juliet; Borand, Laurence; Nolna, Sylvie Kwedi; Komena, Eric; Cumbe, Saniata; Mugisha, Jacob; Natukunda, Naome; Mao, Tan Eang; Wittwer, Jérôme; Bénard, Antoine; Bernard, Tanguy; Sohn, Hojoon; Bonnet, Maryline; Wobudeya, Eric; Marcy, Olivier; Dodd, Peter J.; Arlt-Hilares, Doris; Balestre, Eric; Banga, Marie-France; Breton, Guillaume; Bunnet, Dim; Chateau, Paul-Damien; de Lauzanne, Agathe; Dodd, Peter James; Kaing, Sanary; Koroma, Monica; Kwedi Nolna, Sylvie; Mbang Masson, Douglas; Orne-Gliemann, Joanna; Ouattara, Eric; Poublan, Julien; Tulinawe, Immaculate; Voss de Lima, Yara

Issue Date
2024
Publisher
Elsevier Ltd
Citation
eClinicalMedicine, Vol.70
Abstract
Background: The burden of childhood tuberculosis remains high globally, largely due to under-diagnosis. Decentralising childhood tuberculosis diagnosis services to lower health system levels could improve case detection, but there is little empirically based evidence on cost-effectiveness or budget impact. Methods: In this mathematical modelling study, we assessed the cost-effectiveness and budget impact of decentralising a comprehensive diagnosis package for childhood tuberculosis to district hospitals (DH-focused) or primary health centres (PHC-focused) compared to standard of care (SOC). The project was conducted in Cambodia, Cameroon, Côte d'Ivoire, Mozambique, Sierra Leone, and Uganda between August 1st, 2018 and September 30th, 2021. A mathematical model was developed to assess the health and economic outcomes of the intervention from a health system perspective. Estimated outcomes were tuberculosis cases, deaths, disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs). We also calculated the budget impact of nationwide implementation. The TB-Speed Decentralization study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT04038632. Findings: For the DH-focused strategy versus SOC, ICERs ranged between $263 (Cambodia) and $342 (Côte d'Ivoire) per DALY averted. For the PHC-focused strategy versus SOC, ICERs ranged between $477 (Cambodia) and $599 (Côte d'Ivoire) per DALY averted. Results were sensitive to TB prevalence and the discount rate used. The additional costs of implementing the DH-focused strategy ranged between $12.8 M (range 10.8–16.4) (Cambodia) and $50.4 M (36.5–74.4) (Mozambique), and between $13.9 M (12.6–15.6) (Sierra Leone) and $134.6 M (127.1–143.0) (Uganda) for the PHC-focused strategy. Interpretation: The DH-focused strategy may be cost-effective in some countries, depending on the cost-effectiveness threshold used for policy making. Either intervention would require substantial early investment. Funding: Unitaid.
ISSN
2589-5370
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/201728
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eclinm.2024.102528
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  • College of Medicine
  • Department of Human Systems Medicine
Research Area 결핵, 국제보건, 에이즈

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