Abstract

BackgroundGlobally, Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) vaccine has substantially reduced the burden of Hib invasive disease. However, China remains the only country not to include Hib vaccine into its national immunization program (NIP), although it accounts for 11% of global Hib deaths. We aimed to assess the cost-effectiveness of including Hib vaccine in China’s NIP at the national and provincial levels.MethodsUsing a decision-tree Markov state transition model, we estimated the cost-effectiveness of Hib vaccine in the NIP compared to the status quo of Hib vaccine in the private market for the 2017 birth cohort. Treatment costs and vaccine program costs were calculated from Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and national insurance databases. Epidemiological data and other model parameters were obtained from published literature. Cases and deaths averted, quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) gained, and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICER) were predicted by province. Deterministic and probabilistic sensitivity analyses were performed to explore model uncertainty.ResultsIncluding Hib vaccine in the NIP was projected to prevent approximately 2700 deaths (93% reduction) and 235,700 cases of Hib disease (92% reduction) for the 2017 birth cohort at the national level. Hib vaccine was cost-effective nationally (US$ 8001 per QALY gained) compared to the GDP per capita and cost-effective in 15 of 31 provinces. One-way and scenario sensitivity analyses indicated results were robust when varying model parameters, and in probabilistic sensitivity analysis, Hib vaccine had a 64% probability of being cost-effective nationally.ConclusionIntroducing Hib vaccine in China’s NIP is cost-effective nationally and in many provinces. Less socioeconomically developed provinces with high Hib disease burden and low access to Hib vaccine in the current private market, such as those in the west region, would benefit the most from adding Hib vaccine to the NIP. In the absence of a national policy decision on Hib vaccine, this analysis provides evidence for provincial governments to include Hib vaccine into local immunization programs to substantially reduce disease burden and treatment costs.

Highlights

  • Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) vaccine has substantially reduced the burden of Hib invasive disease

  • The model predicted that Hib vaccine in the national immunization program (NIP) was projected to avert approximately 235,700 Hib cases and 2700 Hib deaths, a 93% reduction, over the first 5 years of life for the cohort

  • The deterministic sensitivity analysis showed that the impact of Hib sequelae parameters was minimal compared to other parameters, but this could be an underestimate because the treatment cost estimates used did not account for lifelong costs to treat the sequelae. Despite these limitations, Hib vaccine was costeffective at the national level, in several provinces in China, and even cost-saving in three west provinces

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Summary

Introduction

Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) vaccine has substantially reduced the burden of Hib invasive disease. China remains the only country not to include Hib vaccine into its national immunization program (NIP), it accounts for 11% of global Hib deaths. We aimed to assess the costeffectiveness of including Hib vaccine in China’s NIP at the national and provincial levels. Vaccination is one of the most effective means of preventing Hib disease in a variety of settings around the world [5,6,7], and it remains an effective tool to reduce antibiotic resistance among some bacterial pathogens including Hib [8]. China is the only WHO member that has not included Hib vaccine in its NIP. While the global burden of Hib disease has decreased significantly in recent years with expanded access to Hib vaccine [11], China has a relatively large remaining burden of Hib disease [3, 4]

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