Abstract

BackgroundRespiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is a common cause of respiratory infection that is highly prevalent in infants. Severe cases of RSV infection require hospitalisation; this is most likely to occur in infant populations at high risk. The study assesses the cost-effectiveness of palivizumab versus no prophylaxis in infants at high risk of hospitalisation with RSV in the United Kingdom (UK).MethodsA decision tree model was developed to reflect the clinical pathway of infants at high risk of severe RSV infection who receive either prophylaxis with palivizumab or no prophylaxis. The main outcome was the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER). One-way and probabilistic sensitivity analyses were performed to assess the degree of uncertainty surrounding the results. A threshold analysis considered the impact of clinical and environmental risk factors on the cost-effectiveness in the subgroup of preterm infants 33–35 weeks gestational age (wGA).ResultsProphylaxis with palivizumab compared with no prophylaxis is associated with the following ICERs; £33,216 for infants with congenital heart disease; £19,168 for infants with chronic lung disease; £3,845 for preterm infants < 29 wGA; £30,205 for preterm infants 29–32 wGA; and £99,056 for preterm infants 33–35 wGA. One-way sensitivity analysis suggests that these results are highly sensitive to the input data. Threshold analysis in the preterm 33–35 wGA subgroup demonstrates that an adjusted RSV-hospitalisation baseline risk of 17.94% or higher would result in an ICER below the £30,000 per quality-adjusted life-year threshold.DiscussionPalivizumab is cost-effective compared to no prophylaxis in the United Kingdom in many of the subgroups considered, showing that palivizumab would be a cost-effective use of National Health Service resources.

Highlights

  • Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is a common cause of respiratory infection that is highly prevalent in infants

  • Outline of the economic model A decision tree model was developed to reflect the clinical pathway of infants at high risk of severe RSV infection who either receive prophylaxis with palivizumab or no prophylaxis

  • The influence of two parameter types was common across all subgroups: those affecting the number of RSV hospitalisations and those affecting costs

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Summary

Introduction

Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is a common cause of respiratory infection that is highly prevalent in infants. Severe cases of RSV infection require hospitalisation; this is most likely to occur in infant populations at high risk. The study assesses the cost-effectiveness of palivizumab versus no prophylaxis in infants at high risk of hospitalisation with RSV in the United Kingdom (UK). Human respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is a common virus that causes respiratory tract infections. In the majority of cases, RSV infection is a mild and self-limiting illness, it can be severe enough to cause lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI) requiring hospitalisation in babies and infants and is associated with significant. Mild cases of RSV are usually not formally diagnosed and treatment involves self-care measures to relieve the symptoms [13,14]. To date there is no effective treatment for RSV LRTI beyond supportive care [13,14]

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