Cost-effectiveness of lung transplantation in the Netherlands - A scenario analysis

  • MJ Al
  • , MA Koopmanschap*
  • , PJ van Enckevort
  • , W van der Bij
  • , EM TenVergert
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

51 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Study objectives: To calculate cost-effectiveness of scenarios concerning lung transplantation in the Netherlands.

Design: Microsimulation model predicting survival, quality of life, and costs with and without transplantation program, based on data of the Dutch lung transplantation program of 1990 to 1995.

Setting: Netherlands, University Hospital Groningen.

Patients: Included were 425 patients referred for lung transplantation, of whom 57 underwent transplantation.

Intervention: Lung transplantation.

Results: For the baseline scenario, the costs per life-year gained are G 194,000 (G=Netherlands guilders) and the costs per quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) gained are G 167,000. Restricting patient inflow ("policy scenario") lowers the costs per life-year gained: G 172,000 (costs per QALY gained: G 144,000). The supply of more donor lungs could reduce the costs per life-year gained to G 159,000 (G 135,000 per QALY gained; G1=US$0.6, based on exchange rate at the time of the study).

Conclusions: Lung transplantation is an expensive but effective intervention: survival and quality of life improve substantially after transplantation, The costs per life-year gained are relatively high, compared with other interventions and other types of transplantation. Restricting the patient inflow and/or raising donor supply improves cast-effectiveness to some degree. Limiting the extent of inpatient screening or lower future costs of immunosuppressives may slightly improve the cost-effectiveness of the program.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)124-130
Number of pages7
JournalChest
Volume113
Issue number1
Publication statusPublished - Jan-1998

Keywords

  • cost-effectiveness
  • cost utility
  • lung transplantation
  • microsimulation
  • scenario-analysis
  • HEART

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