Internet- and mobile-based intervention for depression in adults with chronic back pain: A health economic evaluation

Depression and comorbid chronic back pain (CBP) lead to high personal and economic burden. Internet- and mobile-based interventions (IMI) might be a cost-effective adjunct to established interventions. A health economic evaluation was embedded into an observer-blinded, multicenter RCT (societal and...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of affective disorders 2022-07, Vol.308, p.607-615
Hauptverfasser: Paganini, Sarah, Terhorst, Yannik, Sander, Lasse Bosse, Lin, Jiaxi, Schlicker, Sandra, Ebert, David Daniel, Berking, Matthias, Riper, Heleen, Baumeister, Harald
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container_end_page 615
container_issue
container_start_page 607
container_title Journal of affective disorders
container_volume 308
creator Paganini, Sarah
Terhorst, Yannik
Sander, Lasse Bosse
Lin, Jiaxi
Schlicker, Sandra
Ebert, David Daniel
Berking, Matthias
Riper, Heleen
Baumeister, Harald
description Depression and comorbid chronic back pain (CBP) lead to high personal and economic burden. Internet- and mobile-based interventions (IMI) might be a cost-effective adjunct to established interventions. A health economic evaluation was embedded into an observer-blinded, multicenter RCT (societal and health care perspective). We randomly assigned participants (≥18 years) with CBP and diagnosed depression from 82 orthopedic clinics across Germany to intervention (IG + treatment as usual [TAU]) or TAU control group (CG). The IG received a guided IMI. Primary outcomes were depression response and quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) at 6-months follow-up. Multiple imputation was used to address missing data. Incremental cost-effectiveness/cost-utility ratios (ICER/ICUR) and the probability of being cost-effective at different willingness-to-pay thresholds were calculated. Statistical uncertainty was estimated using bootstrapping techniques (N = 10,000). Between October 2015 and July 2017 210 participants were randomly assigned to IG (n = 105) and CG (n = 105). Depression response did not differ significantly between groups. QALYs were significantly higher in the IG compared to the CG. Taking the societal perspective and assuming a commonly used willingness-to-pay of €34,000/QALY, the intervention's likelihood of being cost-effective was 64%. The main limitation is that the study was powered to detect clinical but not health economic differences between groups. The IMI is considered cost-effective (vs. CG) for individuals with depression and CBP (societal perspective). These results are promising when considering the high individual and economic burden of this patient group. Further research is needed to adequately inform political decision makers before implementation into routine care. •First study to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of an internet-based depression intervention for individuals with chronic pain•The internet-based intervention can be considered cost-effective from a societal perspective.•The intervention led to lower indirect costs compared to the control group (∆€715)•Incremental health and cost outcomes are similar or even more beneficial compared to studies targeting depression alone.
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subjects Adult
Back Pain - therapy
Chronic pain
Comorbidity
Cost-Benefit Analysis
Cost-effectiveness
Cost-utility
Depression - therapy
Depressive disorder
E-Health
Humans
Internet
Quality-Adjusted Life Years
title Internet- and mobile-based intervention for depression in adults with chronic back pain: A health economic evaluation
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