Abstract

BackgroundLifestyle interventions affect patients’ risk factors for metabolic syndrome (MeSy), a pre-stage to cardiovascular diseases, diabetes and related complications. An effective lifestyle intervention is the Swedish Björknäs intervention, a 3-year randomized controlled trial in primary care for MeSy patients. To include future disease-related cost and health consequences in a cost-effectiveness analysis, a simulation model was used to estimate the short-term (3-year) and long-term (lifelong) cost-effectiveness of the Björknäs study.Methodology/ Principal FindingsA Markov micro-simulation model was used to predict the cost and quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) for MeSy-related diseases based on ten risk factors. Model inputs were levels of individual risk factors at baseline and at the third year. The model estimated short-term and long-term costs and QALYs for the intervention and control groups. The cost-effectiveness of the intervention was assessed using differences-in-differences approach to compare the changes between the groups in the health care and societal perspectives, using a 3% discount rate. A 95% confidence interval (CI), based on bootstrapping, and sensitivity analyses describe the uncertainty in the estimates. In the short-term, costs are predicted to increase over time in both groups, but less in the intervention group, resulting in an average cost saving/reduction of US$-700 (in 2012, US$1=six point five seven SEK) and US$-500, in the societal and health care perspectives. The long-term estimate also predicts increased costs, but considerably less in the intervention group: US$-7,300 (95% CI: US$-19,700 to US$-1,000) in the societal, and US$-1,500 (95% CI: US$-5,400 to US$2,650) in the health care perspective. As intervention costs were US$211 per participant, the intervention would result in cost saving. Furthermore, in the long-term an estimated 0.46 QALYs (95% CI: 0.12 to 0.69) per participant would be gained.Conclusions/ SignificanceThe Swedish Björknäs study appears to reduce demands on societal and health care resources and increase health-related quality of life.

Highlights

  • Lifestyle interventions with healthy food habits and increased physical exercise have been shown to be effective in the treatment and prevention of metabolic syndrome (MeSy) [1,2,3], which is a cluster of risk factors for cardiovascular diseases and type 2 diabetes as well as all-cause mortality [4,5]

  • There was an increase in cost in the “with study” scenario compared with the “reference” scenario where the cost increase was higher in the control group compared with the intervention group

  • Regarding qualityadjusted life years (QALYs) in the long term, the control group is estimated to have their QALYs reduced by -0.43 while the intervention group gained 0.03 QALYs

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Summary

Introduction

Lifestyle interventions with healthy food habits and increased physical exercise have been shown to be effective in the treatment and prevention of metabolic syndrome (MeSy) [1,2,3], which is a cluster of risk factors for cardiovascular diseases and type 2 diabetes as well as all-cause mortality [4,5]. High-quality randomized clinical trials (RCTs) focusing on lifestyle interventions for MeSy patients are rare, especially in primary care [10] One such intervention is the Swedish Björknäs intervention [11,12]. An effective lifestyle intervention is the Swedish Björknäs intervention, a 3-year randomized controlled trial in primary care for MeSy patients. To include future disease-related cost and health consequences in a cost-effectiveness analysis, a simulation model was used to estimate the short-term (3-year) and long-term (lifelong) cost-effectiveness of the Björknäs study. The long-term estimate predicts increased costs, but considerably less in the intervention group: US$-7,300 (95% CI: US$-19,700 to US $-1,000) in the societal, and US$-1,500 (95% CI: US$-5,400 to US$2,650) in the health care perspective. Conclusions/ Significance: The Swedish Björknäs study appears to reduce demands on societal and health care resources and increase health-related quality of life

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