Cost-effectiveness of expanded latent TB infection testing and treatment: Lynn City, Massachusetts, USA

BACKGROUND: Between October 2016 and March 2019, Lynn Community Health Center in Massachusetts implemented a targeted latent TB infection testing and treatment (TTT) program, increasing testing from a baseline of 1,200 patients tested to an average of 3,531 patients tested, or 9% of the population p...

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Veröffentlicht in:The international journal of tuberculosis and lung disease 2024-01, Vol.28 (1), p.21-28
Hauptverfasser: Beeler Asay, G R, Woodruff, R, Sanderson, D M, Fisher, C F, Marks, S M, Green, V D, Tibbs, A M, Hill, A N, Haptu, H H, McManus, D, Paradise, R K, Auguste-Nelson, C, Cochran, J J
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:BACKGROUND: Between October 2016 and March 2019, Lynn Community Health Center in Massachusetts implemented a targeted latent TB infection testing and treatment (TTT) program, increasing testing from a baseline of 1,200 patients tested to an average of 3,531 patients tested, or 9% of the population per year.METHODS: We compared pre-implementation TTT, represented by the first two quarters of implementation data, to TTT, represented by 12 quarters of data. Time, diagnostic, and laboratory resources were estimated using micro-costing. Other cost and testing data were obtained from the electronic health record, pharmaceutical claims, and published reimbursement rates. A Markov cohort model estimated future health outcomes and cost-effectiveness from a societal perspective in 2020 US dollars. Monte Carlo simulation generated 95% uncertainty intervals.RESULTS: The TTT program exhibited extended dominance over baseline pre-intervention testing and had an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) of US$52,603 (US$22,008â-"US$95,360). When compared to baseline pre-TTT testing, the TTT program averted an estimated additional 7.12 TB cases, 3.49 hospitalizations, and 0.16 deaths per lifetime cohort each year.CONCLUSIONS: TTT was more cost-effective than baseline pre-implementation testing. Lynn Community Health Centerâ-™s experience can help inform other clinics considering expanding latent TB infection testing.
ISSN:1027-3719
1815-7920
1815-7920
DOI:10.5588/ijtld.22.0654