Abstract

BACKGROUND: Despite a scarcity of tuberculosis (TB) cost data, a substantial body of evidence has been accumulating for drug-susceptible TB (DS-TB) treatment. In this study, we review unit costs for DS-TB treatment from a provider´s perspective. We also examine factors driving cost variations and extrapolate unit costs across low- and middle-income countries (LMICs).METHODS: We searched published and grey literature for any empirically collected TB cost estimates. We selected a subgroup of estimates looking at DS-TB treatment. We extracted information on activities and inputs included. We standardised costs into an average per person-month, fitted a multi-level regression model and cross-validated country-level predictions. We then extrapolated estimates for facility-based, directly observed DS-TB treatment across countries.RESULTS: We included 95 cost estimates from 28 studies across 17 countries. Costs predictions were sensitive to characteristics such as delivery mode, whether hospitalisation was included, and inputs accounted for, as well as gross domestic product per capita. Extrapolation results are presented with uncertainty intervals (UIs) for LMICs. Predicted median costs per 6 months of treatment were US$315.30 (95% CI US$222.60-US$417.20) for low-income, US$527.10 (95% CI US$395.70-US$743.70) for lower middle-income and US$896.40 (95% CI US$654.00-US$1214.40) for upper middle-income countries.CONCLUSIONS: Our study provides country-level DS-TB treatment cost estimates suitable for priority setting. These estimates, while not standing as a substitute for local high-quality primary data, can inform global, regional and national exercises.

Highlights

  • IN 2017, APPROXIMATELY 10 million people developed tuberculosis (TB), with an estimated 1.9 million deaths due to TB globally.[1]

  • Unit costs from China and Syria were excluded in the complete dataset for analysis, as there was no information available for HIV prevalence for the year when the authors reported data in these two countries

  • Our final dataset included 28 studies from 17 countries and reported a total of 95 unit costs.[27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34,35,36,37,38,39,40,41,42,43,44,45,46,47,48,49,50,51,52,53,54]. These estimates can be found online by country in the unit cost study repository (UCSR) of the Global Health Cost Repository

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Summary

Introduction

IN 2017, APPROXIMATELY 10 million people developed tuberculosis (TB), with an estimated 1.9 million deaths due to TB globally.[1]. Cost data for TB services and interventions available globally remains scarce and a concern to analysts and policy makers alike.[2]

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