Abstract

BackgroundTransmission of SARS-CoV-2 in health care facilities poses a challenge against pandemic control. Health care workers (HCWs) have frequent and high-risk interactions with COVID-19 patients. We undertook a cost-effectiveness analysis to determine optimal testing strategies for screening HCWs to inform strategic decision-making in health care settings.MethodsWe modeled the number of new infections, quality-adjusted life years lost, and net costs related to six testing strategies including no test. We applied our model to four strata of HCWs, defined by the presence and timing of symptoms. We conducted sensitivity analyses to account for uncertainty in inputs.ResultsWhen screening recently symptomatic HCWs, conducting only a PCR test is preferable; it saves costs and improves health outcomes in the first week post-symptom onset, and costs $83,000 per quality-adjusted life year gained in the second week post-symptom onset. When screening HCWs in the late clinical disease stage, none of the testing approaches is cost-effective and thus no testing is preferable, yielding $11 and 0.003 new infections per 10 HCWs. For screening asymptomatic HCWs, antigen testing is preferable to PCR testing due to its lower cost.ConclusionsBoth PCR and antigen testing are beneficial strategies to identify infected HCWs and reduce transmission of SARS-CoV-2 in health care settings. IgG tests’ value depends on test timing and immunity characteristics, however it is not cost-effective in a low prevalence setting. As the context of the pandemic evolves, our study provides insight to health-care decision makers to keep the health care workforce safe and transmissions low.

Highlights

  • In December 2019, a novel zoonotic coronavirus, SARSCoV-2, emerged in Wuhan, China, and became a global pandemic [1, 2]

  • Days 1–7 For ten Health care worker (HCW) who have started experiencing symptoms in the past 7 days, conducting no screening results in 24.8 new infections and 1.925 Quality-adjusted life year (QALY) lost, generating a net cost of $82,000. This is the least effective option, and it is dominated by polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-only testing which identifies and mandates isolation for infectious HCWs (Table 2)

  • While Immunoglobulin G (IgG) + PCR testing has a small health benefit over only PCR testing, this benefit is so small that the Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) is over $1 million per QALY gained

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Summary

Introduction

In December 2019, a novel zoonotic coronavirus, SARSCoV-2, emerged in Wuhan, China, and became a global pandemic [1, 2]. With over 82 million confirmed cases and nearly two million fatalities worldwide as of December 30, 2020, it has surpassed the impact of the severe acute respiratory syndrome epidemic of 2002 [3, 4]. The country soon had the highest number of COVID-19 cases and fatalities worldwide [3, 5]. COVID-19 usually initiates as a lower respiratory infection causing mild to severe pneumonia in most cases and inducing multi-organ systemic effects in some. Asymptomatic infections increase the likelihood of further transmission, emphasizing the. Transmission of SARS-CoV-2 in health care facilities poses a challenge against pandemic control. Health care workers (HCWs) have frequent and high-risk interactions with COVID-19 patients. We undertook a cost-effectiveness analysis to determine optimal testing strategies for screening HCWs to inform strategic decision-making in health care settings

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