학술논문

Cost-effectiveness of extended cessation treatment for older smokers.
Document Type
Article
Source
Addiction. Feb2014, Vol. 109 Issue 2, p314-322. 9p. 5 Charts.
Subject
*BEHAVIOR therapy
*CONFIDENCE intervals
*COST effectiveness
*EPIDEMIOLOGY
*POISSON distribution
*RESEARCH funding
*SMOKING cessation
*LOGISTIC regression analysis
*DATA analysis
*QUALITY-adjusted life years
*DATA analysis software
*DESCRIPTIVE statistics
*NICOTINE replacement therapy
Language
ISSN
0965-2140
Abstract
Aims We examined the cost-effectiveness of extended smoking cessation treatment in older smokers. Design Participants who completed a 12-week smoking cessation program were factorial randomized to extended cognitive behavioral treatment and extended nicotine replacement therapy. Setting A free-standing smoking cessation clinic. Participants A total of 402 smokers aged 50 years and older were recruited from the community. Measurements The trial measured biochemically verified abstinence from cigarettes after 2 years and the quantity of smoking cessation services utilized. Trial findings were combined with literature on changes in smoking status and the age- and gender-adjusted effect of smoking on health-care cost, mortality and quality of life over the long term in a Markov model of cost-effectiveness over a lifetime horizon. Findings The addition of extended cognitive behavioral therapy added $83 in smoking cessation services cost [ P = 0.012, confidence interval ( CI) = $22-212]. At the end of follow-up, cigarette abstinence rates were 50.0% with extended cognitive behavioral therapy and 37.2% without this therapy ( P < 0.05, odds ratio 1.69, CI 1.18-2.54). The model-based incremental cost-effectiveness ratio was $6324 per quality-adjusted life year ( QALY). Probabilistic sensitivity analysis found that the additional $947 in lifetime cost of the intervention had a 95% confidence interval of −$331 to 2081; the 0.15 additional QALYs had a confidence interval of 0.035-0.280, and that the intervention was cost-effective against a $50 000/ QALY acceptance criterion in 99.6% of the replicates. Extended nicotine replacement therapy was not cost-effective. Conclusions Adding extended cognitive behavior therapy to standard cessation treatment was cost-effective. Further intensification of treatment may be warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]