Abstract
BackgroundLow-and middle-income countries are facing both a mounting burden of cardiovascular disease (CVD) as well as severe resource constraints that keep them from emulating some of the extensive strategies pursued in high-income countries. There is thus an urgency to identify and implement those interventions that help reap the biggest reductions of the CVD burden, given low resource levels. What are the interventions to combat CVDs that represent good "value for money" in low-and middle-income countries? This study reviews the evidence-base on economic evaluations of interventions located in those countries.MethodsWe conducted a systematic literature review of journal articles published until 2009, based on a comprehensive key-word based search in generic and specialized electronic databases, accompanied by manual searches of expert databases. The search strategy consisted of freetext and MeSH terms related to economic evaluation and cardiovascular disease. Two independent reviewers verified fulfillment of inclusion criteria and extracted study characteristics.ResultsThirty-three studies met the selection criteria. We find a growing research interest, in particular in most recent years, if from a very low baseline. Most interventions fall under the category primary prevention, as opposed to case management or secondary prevention. Across the spectrum of interventions, pharmaceutical strategies have been the predominant focus, and, taken at face value, these show significant positive economic evidence, specifically when compared to the counterfactual of no interventions. Only a few studies consider non-clinical interventions, at population level. Almost half of the studies have modelled the intervention effectiveness based on existing risk-factor information and effectiveness evidence from high-income countries.ConclusionThe cost-effectiveness evidence on CVD interventions in developing countries is growing, but remains scarce, and is biased towards pharmaceutical interventions. While the burden of cardiovascular disease is growing in these countries, future research should put greater emphasis on non-clinical interventions than has hitherto been the case. Significant differences in outcome measures and methodologies prohibit a direct ranking of the interventions by their degree of cost-effectiveness. Considerable caution should be exercised when transferring effectiveness estimates from developed countries for the purpose of modelling cost-effectiveness in developing countries. New local CVD risk factor and intervention follow-up studies are needed. Some pharmaceutical strategies appear cost-effective while clarifications are needed on the diagnostic approach in single high-risk factor vs. absolute risk targeting, the role of patient compliance, and the potential public health consequences of large-scale medicalization.
Highlights
Low-and middle-income countries are facing both a mounting burden of cardiovascular disease (CVD) as well as severe resource constraints that keep them from emulating some of the extensive strategies pursued in high-income countries
Between 1990 and 2020, coronary heart disease alone is anticipated to increase by 120% for women and by 137% for men in developing countries [2]. This epidemiological transition cannot solely be explained by a rise in life expectancy or the tackling of other conditions, such as communicable diseases, but can be attributed to an increase in risk factor prevalence in developing countries, including smoking, risk-increasing dietary patterns and physical inactivity [3]. These harmful behaviors contribute to chronic conditions, such as hypertension, dyslipidemia and diabetes mellitus, which in turn act as risk factors for cardiovascular disease
One explanation for the few studies we identified might lie in our search strategy, which focused on studies concerning primarily CVD
Summary
Low-and middle-income countries are facing both a mounting burden of cardiovascular disease (CVD) as well as severe resource constraints that keep them from emulating some of the extensive strategies pursued in high-income countries. Between 1990 and 2020, coronary heart disease alone is anticipated to increase by 120% for women and by 137% for men in developing countries [2] This epidemiological transition cannot solely be explained by a rise in life expectancy or the tackling of other conditions, such as communicable diseases, but can be attributed to an increase in risk factor prevalence in developing countries (in particular in urban regions), including smoking, risk-increasing dietary patterns and physical inactivity [3]. These harmful behaviors contribute to chronic conditions, such as hypertension, dyslipidemia and diabetes mellitus, which in turn act as risk factors for cardiovascular disease. The undoubtedly mounting burden raises the question, what if anything could be done about it
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