학술논문

Cost effectiveness of outpatient treatment for febrile neutropaenia in adult cancer patients.
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
British Journal of Cancer. 4/26/2011, Vol. 104 Issue 9, p1377-1383. 7p. 1 Diagram, 2 Charts, 2 Graphs.
Subject
*FEBRILE neutropenia
*CANCER patients
*COST effectiveness
*OUTPATIENT medical care
*DIRECT costing
*HOSPITAL care
*THERAPEUTICS
*TREATMENT of fever
*INTRAVENOUS therapy
*ANTIBIOTICS
*ANTINEOPLASTIC agents
*COMPARATIVE studies
*DECISION trees
*FEVER
*HOSPITAL costs
*RESEARCH methodology
*MEDICAL cooperation
*NEUTROPENIA
*ORAL drug administration
*RESEARCH
*RESEARCH funding
*SYSTEM analysis
*TIME
*TUMORS
*EVALUATION research
*DISCHARGE planning
*STATISTICAL models
*DISEASE complications
*ECONOMICS
Language
ISSN
0007-0920
Abstract
Background: There is uncertainty whether low-risk episodes of febrile neutropaenia (FN) in adult cancer patients are best managed in the in- or outpatient setting.Methods: A Monte Carlo cost-utility model was created to compare four treatment strategies for low-risk FN: (1) treatment in hospital with intravenous antibiotics (HospIV); (2) early discharge after 48 h in-patient observation, followed by oral outpatient treatment (EarlyDC); (3) outpatient management with IV antibiotics (HomeIV); and (4) outpatient management with oral antibiotics (HomePO). The model used a health-care payer perspective and a time horizon of one FN episode. Outcome measures were quality-adjusted FN episodes (QAFNE), costs (Canadian dollars) and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICER). Parameter uncertainty was assessed with probabilistic sensitivity analyses.Results: HomePO was cost saving ($3470 vs $4183), but less effective (0.65 QAFNE vs 0.72 QAFNE) than HomeIV. The corresponding ICER was $10,186 per QAFNE. Both EarlyDC ($6115; 0.66 QAFNE) and HospIV ($13,557; 0.62 QAFNE) were dominated strategies. At a willingness-to-pay (WTP) threshold of $4,000 per QAFNE, HomePO and HomeIV were cost effective in 54 and 38% of simulations, respectively.Interpretation: For adult cancer patients with an episode of low-risk FN, treatment in hospital is more expensive and less effective than outpatient strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]