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Cost-Effectiveness and Budget Impact Analyses of Pneumococcal Vaccination in Indonesia

As a country with the high number of deaths due to pneumococcal disease, Indonesia has not yet included pneumococcal vaccination into the routine program. This study aimed to analyse the cost-effectiveness and the budget impact of pneumococcal vaccination in Indonesia by developing an age-structured...

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Autores principales: Suwantika, Auliya A., Zakiyah, Neily, Abdulah, Rizky, Sitohang, Vensya, Tandy, Gertrudis, Anartati, Atiek, Hidayatullah, Tetrawindu, Herliana, Putri, Hadinegoro, Sri R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8096558/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33995536
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/7494965
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author Suwantika, Auliya A.
Zakiyah, Neily
Abdulah, Rizky
Sitohang, Vensya
Tandy, Gertrudis
Anartati, Atiek
Hidayatullah, Tetrawindu
Herliana, Putri
Hadinegoro, Sri R.
author_facet Suwantika, Auliya A.
Zakiyah, Neily
Abdulah, Rizky
Sitohang, Vensya
Tandy, Gertrudis
Anartati, Atiek
Hidayatullah, Tetrawindu
Herliana, Putri
Hadinegoro, Sri R.
author_sort Suwantika, Auliya A.
collection PubMed
description As a country with the high number of deaths due to pneumococcal disease, Indonesia has not yet included pneumococcal vaccination into the routine program. This study aimed to analyse the cost-effectiveness and the budget impact of pneumococcal vaccination in Indonesia by developing an age-structured cohort model. In a comparison with no vaccination, the use of two vaccines (PCV10 and PCV13) within two pricing scenarios (UNICEF and government contract price) was taken into account. To estimate the cost-effectiveness value, a 5-year time horizon was applied by extrapolating the outcome of the individual in the modelled cohort until 5 years of age with a 1-month analytical cycle. To estimate the affordability value, a 6-year period (2019–2024) was applied by considering the government's strategic plan on pneumococcal vaccination. In a comparison with no vaccination, the results showed that vaccination would reduce pneumococcal disease by 1,702,548 and 2,268,411 cases when using PCV10 and PCV13, respectively. Vaccination could potentially reduce the highest treatment cost from the payer perspective at $53.6 million and $71.4 million for PCV10 and PCV13, respectively. Applying the UNICEF price, the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) from the healthcare perspective would be $218 and $162 per QALY-gained for PCV10 and PCV13, respectively. Applying the government contract price, the ICER would be $987 and $747 per QALY-gained for PCV10 and PCV13, respectively. The result confirmed that PCV13 was more cost-effective than PCV10 with both prices. In particular, introduction cost per child was estimated to be $0.91 and vaccination cost of PCV13 per child (3 doses) was estimated to be $16.61 and $59.54 with UNICEF and government contract prices, respectively. Implementation of nationwide vaccination would require approximately $73.3–$75.0 million (13–14% of routine immunization budget) and $257.4-$263.5 million (45–50% of routine immunization budget) with UNICEF and government contract prices, respectively. Sensitivity analysis showed that vaccine efficacy, mortality rate, and vaccine price were the most influential parameters affecting the ICER. In conclusion, pneumococcal vaccination would be a highly cost-effective intervention to be implemented in Indonesia. Yet, applying PCV13 with UNICEF price would give the best cost-effectiveness and affordability values on the routine immunization budget.
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spelling pubmed-80965582021-05-13 Cost-Effectiveness and Budget Impact Analyses of Pneumococcal Vaccination in Indonesia Suwantika, Auliya A. Zakiyah, Neily Abdulah, Rizky Sitohang, Vensya Tandy, Gertrudis Anartati, Atiek Hidayatullah, Tetrawindu Herliana, Putri Hadinegoro, Sri R. J Environ Public Health Research Article As a country with the high number of deaths due to pneumococcal disease, Indonesia has not yet included pneumococcal vaccination into the routine program. This study aimed to analyse the cost-effectiveness and the budget impact of pneumococcal vaccination in Indonesia by developing an age-structured cohort model. In a comparison with no vaccination, the use of two vaccines (PCV10 and PCV13) within two pricing scenarios (UNICEF and government contract price) was taken into account. To estimate the cost-effectiveness value, a 5-year time horizon was applied by extrapolating the outcome of the individual in the modelled cohort until 5 years of age with a 1-month analytical cycle. To estimate the affordability value, a 6-year period (2019–2024) was applied by considering the government's strategic plan on pneumococcal vaccination. In a comparison with no vaccination, the results showed that vaccination would reduce pneumococcal disease by 1,702,548 and 2,268,411 cases when using PCV10 and PCV13, respectively. Vaccination could potentially reduce the highest treatment cost from the payer perspective at $53.6 million and $71.4 million for PCV10 and PCV13, respectively. Applying the UNICEF price, the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) from the healthcare perspective would be $218 and $162 per QALY-gained for PCV10 and PCV13, respectively. Applying the government contract price, the ICER would be $987 and $747 per QALY-gained for PCV10 and PCV13, respectively. The result confirmed that PCV13 was more cost-effective than PCV10 with both prices. In particular, introduction cost per child was estimated to be $0.91 and vaccination cost of PCV13 per child (3 doses) was estimated to be $16.61 and $59.54 with UNICEF and government contract prices, respectively. Implementation of nationwide vaccination would require approximately $73.3–$75.0 million (13–14% of routine immunization budget) and $257.4-$263.5 million (45–50% of routine immunization budget) with UNICEF and government contract prices, respectively. Sensitivity analysis showed that vaccine efficacy, mortality rate, and vaccine price were the most influential parameters affecting the ICER. In conclusion, pneumococcal vaccination would be a highly cost-effective intervention to be implemented in Indonesia. Yet, applying PCV13 with UNICEF price would give the best cost-effectiveness and affordability values on the routine immunization budget. Hindawi 2021-04-27 /pmc/articles/PMC8096558/ /pubmed/33995536 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/7494965 Text en Copyright © 2021 Auliya A. Suwantika et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Suwantika, Auliya A.
Zakiyah, Neily
Abdulah, Rizky
Sitohang, Vensya
Tandy, Gertrudis
Anartati, Atiek
Hidayatullah, Tetrawindu
Herliana, Putri
Hadinegoro, Sri R.
Cost-Effectiveness and Budget Impact Analyses of Pneumococcal Vaccination in Indonesia
title Cost-Effectiveness and Budget Impact Analyses of Pneumococcal Vaccination in Indonesia
title_full Cost-Effectiveness and Budget Impact Analyses of Pneumococcal Vaccination in Indonesia
title_fullStr Cost-Effectiveness and Budget Impact Analyses of Pneumococcal Vaccination in Indonesia
title_full_unstemmed Cost-Effectiveness and Budget Impact Analyses of Pneumococcal Vaccination in Indonesia
title_short Cost-Effectiveness and Budget Impact Analyses of Pneumococcal Vaccination in Indonesia
title_sort cost-effectiveness and budget impact analyses of pneumococcal vaccination in indonesia
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8096558/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33995536
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/7494965
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