医学
加药
随机对照试验
乳腺癌
协议(科学)
质量调整寿命年
经济评价
成本效益
物理疗法
癌症
外科
内科学
替代医学
风险分析(工程)
病理
作者
Yanhong Li,Shelby D. Reed,Joseph G. Winger,Kelly A. Hyland,Hannah M. Fisher,Sarah A. Kelleher,Shannon N Miller,Marie Davidian,Eric B. Laber,Francis J. Keefe,Tamara J. Somers
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.jpain.2023.05.004
摘要
Pain coping skills training (PCST) is efficacious in patients with cancer, but clinical access is limited. To inform implementation, as a secondary outcome, we estimated the cost-effectiveness of 8 dosing strategies of PCST evaluated in a sequential multiple assignment randomized trial among women with breast cancer and pain (N = 327). Women were randomized to initial doses and re-randomized to subsequent doses based on their initial response (ie, ≥30% pain reduction). A decision-analytic model was designed to incorporate costs and benefits associated with 8 different PCST dosing strategies. In the primary analysis, costs were limited to resources required to deliver PCST. Quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) were modeled based on utility weights measured with the EuroQol-5 dimension 5-level at 4 assessments over 10 months. A probabilistic sensitivity analysis was performed to account for parameter uncertainty. Implementation of PCST initiated with the 5-session protocol was more costly ($693–853) than strategies initiated with the 1-session protocol ($288–496). QALYs for strategies beginning with the 5-session protocol were greater than for strategies beginning with the 1-session protocol. With the goal of implementing PCST as part of comprehensive cancer treatment and with willingness-to-pay thresholds ranging beyond $20,000 per QALY, the strategy most likely to provide the greatest number of QALYs at an acceptable cost was a 1-session PCST protocol followed by either 5 maintenance telephone calls for responders or 5 sessions of PCST for nonresponders. A PCST program with 1 initial session and subsequent dosing based on response provides good value and improved outcomes. Perspective This article presents the results of a cost analysis of the delivery of PCST, a nonpharmacological intervention, to women with breast cancer and pain. Results could potentially provide important cost-related information to health care providers and systems on the use of an efficacious and accessible nonmedication strategy for pain management. Trials Registration ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT02791646, registered 6/2/2016.
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