Title: Economic evaluation of psychotherapy for personality disorders:
1- Economic evaluation of psychotherapy for
personality disorders - burden of disease, cost-effectiveness, and value
of information and implementation - Djøra Soeteman
- Viersprong Institute for Studies on Personality
Disorders - Erasmus Medical Center, Rotterdam
- Center for Health Decision Science, Boston, MA
- Boston, December 2, 2009
2Efficient health care provision
- Three questions need to be addressed
- - Which treatments are cost-effective and should
be adopted? (reimbursement decision) - - Is it worthwhile to conduct additional research
(research decision) - - Is it cost-effective to implement treatments
into clinical practice (implementation decision).
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4Reimbursement decision
Necessity
Effectiveness
Cost-effectiveness
Reimbursement decision
5Reimbursement decision 3 criteria
- Necessary care
- How severe is the disease?
- Effectiveness
- Is treatment effective?
- Cost-effectiveness
- Are the effects worth the costs?
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6Reimbursement decision criterion 1
- Necessity how severe is the disease?
- Is it a common disease? (prevalence)
- Does the patient suffers? (individual burden)
- What are the costs? (economic burden)
7Prevalence
- Prevalence in the general population 13,5
- Verheul et al., 1999
- Treatment seeking 19,1
- in the year prior to interview
- Andrews et al., 2001
- 422.285 patients in the Netherlands
- Prevalence x population x treatment seekers
- 13,5 x 16.377.153 x 19,1
8Individual burden
Soeteman et al., 2008 The burden of disease in
personality disorders diagnosis-specific quality
of life. Journal of Personality Disorders, 22,
259-268
9Relation between funding and burden
Pronk et al., 2004 Outpatient drug policy by
clinical assessment rather than financial
constraints. Eur J Health Econom, 5, 274-277
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10Economic burden
Soeteman et al., 2008 The economic burden of
personality disorders in mental health care.
Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, 69, 259-265
11Total societal costs
- Health care utilization 3,12 billion
- Productivity losses 0,24- 3,60 billion
- Criminal justice resources 0,27 billion
- Total annual costs 3,6- 7,0 billion
- (conservative estimate not included e.g., costs
of non-treatment seekers, intergenerational
transfer)
12Reimbursement decision criterion 1
- Necessary care
- Highly prevalent
- Low quality of life
- High societal costs
13Reimbursement decision criterion 2
- Necessary care
- Highly prevalent
- Low quality of life
- High societal costs
- Effectiveness
- Is treatment effective?
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16Evidence for effectiveness
17Reimbursement decision criterion 2
- Necessary care
- Highly prevalent
- Low quality of life
- High societal costs
- Effectiveness
- Psychotherapeutic treatments are effective
18Reimbursement decision criterion 3
- Necessary care
- Highly prevalent
- Low quality of life
- High societal costs
- Effectiveness
- Psychotherapeutic treatments are effective
- Cost-effectiveness
- Are the effects worth the costs?
19Current evidence?
20Current evidence a promise Brazier et al., 2007
- John Brazier, Prof. of Health economics.
- University of Sheffield
- Psychological therapies for borderline
personality disorder a systematic review and
preliminary economic evaluation - Integrating existing evidence in health economic
model - The results are promising for psychotherapy,
though surrounded by a high degree of
uncertainty. There is a need for considerable
research in this area.
21First (!) state-of-the-art cost-effectiveness
study from the Netherlands
- RCT Van Asselt et al., 2008 (BJP)
- Compared Transference-Focused Psychotherapy and
Schema-Focused Therapy for borderline PD - recovered after 4 years
- SFT 52.3
- TFP 28.6
- Treatment costs
- SFT 12,946
- TFP 10,876
- Total costs over 4 years
- SFT 37,826
- TFP 46,795
22SCEPTRE trial
- Patient-level primary data was available from the
largest existing clinical trial of psychotherapy
for personality disorders (N 924) - Dosage specified by treatment setting and
duration - Cluster C PD N 466
23 24Different dosages
- Short-term outpatient excl.
- Long-term outpatient 21.4
- Short-term day hospital 19.0
- Long-term day hospital 23.0
- Short-term inpatient 14.1
- Long-term inpatient 22.5
- Short-term lt 6 months
- Long-term gt 6 months
25Model structure
- Markov model 5-year time horizon
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26Different costs
27Total costs over 5 years
28Effect over 5 years
29Costs per QALY
30Uncertainty
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31CEAC
32Cost-effectiveness of different dosages of
psychotherapy for cluster C PD
33Cost-effectiveness of different dosages of
psychotherapy for cluster C PD
34Conclusion
- Cluster C PD
- Cost-effective treatment strategies are
- Short-term inpatient psychotherapy (first choice)
- Short-term day hospital psychotherapy
- Sub-optimal treatment options are
- Long-term day hospital and long-term inpatient
35Reimbursement decision 3 criteria
- Necessary care
- Highly prevalent
- Low quality of life
- High societal costs
- Effectiveness
- Psychotherapeutic treatments are effective
- Cost-effectiveness
- Cost-effective treatment strategies for cluster C
PD are available
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37Decision uncertainty
- Uncertainty in cost-effectiveness
- Current information on costs and effects is
imperfect
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38EVPI
- Population expected value of perfect information
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39EVPPI
- EVPI for parameter groups
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41EVPIM
- Population expected value of perfect
implementation
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42Efficient health care provision
- Recommendations based on three questions
- Based on currently available evidence short-term
inpatient psychotherapy is the most
cost-effective choice (at threshold value of
40,000 per QALY) - Before implementing this cost-effective treatment
strategy into clinical practice, further research
is valuable especially when prioritizing
information on treatment costs and transition
probabilities.
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