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Budgetary impact of using BPaL for treating extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis

Cited 11 time in Web of Science Cited 17 time in Scopus
Authors

Mulder, Christiaan; Rupert, Stephan; Setiawan, Ery; Mambetova, Elmira; Edo, Patience; Sugiharto, Jhon; Useni, Sani; Malhotra, Shelly; Cook-Scalise, Sarah; Pambudi, Imran; Kadyrov, Abdullaat; Lawanson, Adebola; van den Hof, Susan; Gebhard, Agnes; Juneja, Sandeep; Sohn, Hojoon

Issue Date
2022-01
Publisher
BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
Citation
BMJ GLOBAL HEALTH, Vol.7 No.1
Abstract
Introduction Bedaquiline, pretomanid and linezolid (BPaL) is a new all oral, 6-month regimen comprised of bedaquiline, the new drug pretomanid and linezolid, endorsed by the WHO for use under operational research conditions in patients with extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis (XDR-TB). We quantified per-patient treatment costs and the 5-year budgetary impact of introducing BPaL in Indonesia, Kyrgyzstan and Nigeria. Methods Per-patient treatment cost of BPaL regimen was compared head-to-head with the conventional XDR-TB treatment regimen for respective countries based on cost estimates primarily assessed using microcosting method and expected frequency of each TB service. The 5-year budget impact of gradual introduction of BPaL against the status quo was assessed using a Markov model that represented patient's treatment management and outcome pathways. Results The cost per patient completing treatment with BPaL was US$7142 in Indonesia, US$4782 in Kyrgyzstan and US$7152 in Nigeria - 57%, 78% and 68% lower than the conventional regimens in the respective countries. A gradual adoption of the BPaL regimen over 5 years would result in an 5-year average national TB service budget reduction of 17% (US$128 780) in XDR-TB treatment-related expenditure in Indonesia, 15% (US$700 247) in Kyrgyzstan and 32% (US$1 543 047) in Nigeria. Conclusion Our study demonstrates that the BPaL regimen can be highly cost-saving compared with the conventional regimens to treat patients with XDR-TB in high drug-resistant TB burden settings. This supports the rapid adoption of the BPaL regimen to address the significant programmatic and clinical challenges in managing patients with XDR-TB in high DR-TB burden countries.
ISSN
2059-7908
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/201745
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2021-007182
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  • College of Medicine
  • Department of Human Systems Medicine
Research Area 결핵, 국제보건, 에이즈

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