Cost-effectiveness of non-invasive methods for assessment and monitoring of liver fibrosis and cirrhosis in patients with chronic liver disease: systematic review and economic evaluation

被引:110
作者
Crossan, Catriona [1 ]
Tsochatzis, Emmanuel A. [2 ,3 ]
Longworth, Louise [1 ]
Gurusamy, Kurinchi [4 ]
Davidson, Brian [4 ]
Rodriguez-Peralvarez, Manuel [2 ,3 ]
Mantzoukis, Konstantinos [2 ,3 ]
O'Brien, Julia [2 ,3 ]
Thalassinos, Evangelos [2 ,3 ]
Papastergiou, Vassilios [2 ,3 ]
Burroughs, Andrew [2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Brunel Univ London, Hlth Econ Res Grp, Uxbridge, Middx, England
[2] Royal Free Hosp, Sheila Sherlock Liver Ctr, London, England
[3] Royal Free Hosp, UCL Inst Liver & Digest Hlth, London, England
[4] UCL Med Sch, Royal Free Campus, London, England
关键词
CHRONIC HEPATITIS-C; PLATELET RATIO INDEX; QUALITY-OF-LIFE; B-E-ANTIGEN; TRANSIENT ELASTOGRAPHY FIBROSCAN; CHRONIC VIRAL-HEPATITIS; BIOCHEMICAL MARKERS FIBROTEST; MAGNETIC-RESONANCE ELASTOGRAPHY; RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED-TRIAL; DIFFUSION-WEIGHTED MRI;
D O I
10.3310/hta19090
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Background: Liver biopsy is the reference standard for diagnosing the extent of fibrosis in chronic liver disease; however, it is invasive, with the potential for serious complications. Alternatives to biopsy include non-invasive liver tests (NILTs); however, the cost-effectiveness of these needs to be established. Objective: To assess the diagnostic accuracy and cost-effectiveness of NILTs in patients with chronic liver disease. Data sources: We searched various databases from 1998 to April 2012, recent conference proceedings and reference lists. Methods: We included studies that assessed the diagnostic accuracy of NILTs using liver biopsy as the reference standard. Diagnostic studies were assessed using the Quality Assessment of Diagnostic Accuracy Studies (QUADAS-2) tool. Meta-analysis was conducted using the bivariate random-effects model with correlation between sensitivity and specificity (whenever possible). Decision models were used to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of the NILTs. Expected costs were estimated using a NHS perspective and health outcomes were measured as quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs). Markov models were developed to estimate long-term costs and QALYs following testing, and antiviral treatment where indicated, for chronic hepatitis B (HBV) and chronic hepatitis C (HCV). NILTs were compared with each other, sequential testing strategies, biopsy and strategies including no testing. For alcoholic liver disease (ALD), we assessed the cost-effectiveness of NILTs in the context of potentially increasing abstinence from alcohol. Owing to a lack of data and treatments specifically for fibrosis in patients with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), the analysis was limited to an incremental cost per correct diagnosis. An analysis of NILTs to identify patients with cirrhosis for increased monitoring was also conducted. Results: Given a cost-effectiveness threshold of 20,000 pound per QALY, treating everyone with HCV without prior testing was cost-effective with an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) of 9204 pound. This was robust in most sensitivity analyses but sensitive to the extent of treatment benefit for patients with mild fibrosis. For HBV [hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg)-negative)] this strategy had an ICER of 28,137 pound, which was cost-effective only if the upper bound of the standard UK cost-effectiveness threshold range (30,000) pound is acceptable. For HBeAg-positive disease, two NILTs applied sequentially (hyaluronic acid and magnetic resonance elastography) were cost-effective at a 20,000 pound threshold (ICER: 19,612); pound however, the results were highly uncertain, with several test strategies having similar expected outcomes and costs. For patients with ALD, liver biopsy was the cost-effective strategy, with an ICER of 822 pound. Limitations: A substantial number of tests had only one study from which diagnostic accuracy was derived; therefore, there is a high risk of bias. Most NILTs did not have validated cut-offs for diagnosis of specific fibrosis stages. The findings of the ALD model were dependent on assuptions about abstinence rates assumptions and the modelling approach for NAFLD was hindered by the lack of evidence on clinically effective treatments. Conclusions: Treating everyone without NILTs is cost-effective for patients with HCV, but only for HBeAg-negative if the higher cost-effectiveness threshold is appropriate. For HBeAg-positive, two NILTs applied sequentially were cost-effective but highly uncertain. Further evidence for treatment effectiveness is required for ALD and NAFLD.
引用
收藏
页码:1 / +
页数:411
相关论文
共 510 条
  • [1] Hepascore: An accurate validated predictor of liver fibrosis in chronic hepatitis C infection
    Adams, LA
    Bulsara, M
    Rossi, E
    Deboer, B
    Speers, D
    George, J
    Kench, J
    Farrell, G
    McCaughan, GW
    Jeffrey, GP
    [J]. CLINICAL CHEMISTRY, 2005, 51 (10) : 1867 - 1873
  • [2] Complex non-invasive fibrosis models are more accurate than simple models in non-alcoholic fatty liver disease
    Adams, Leon A.
    George, Jacob
    Bugianesi, Elisabetta
    Rossi, Enrico
    De Boer, W. Bastiaan
    van der Poorten, David
    Ching, Helena L. I.
    Bulsara, Max
    Jeffrey, Gary P.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF GASTROENTEROLOGY AND HEPATOLOGY, 2011, 26 (10) : 1536 - 1543
  • [3] Afdhal NH, 2009, NEW ENGL J MED, V360, P1902, DOI 10.1056/NEJMclde0900131
  • [4] Liver fibrosis: Noninvasive diagnosis with double contrast material-enhanced MR imaging
    Aguirre, DA
    Behling, CA
    Alpert, E
    Hassanein, TI
    Sirlin, CB
    [J]. RADIOLOGY, 2006, 239 (02) : 425 - 437
  • [5] A comparison of four fibrosis indexes in chronic HCV: Development of new fibrosis-cirrhosis index (FCI)
    Ahmad, Waqar
    Ijaz, Bushra
    Javed, Fouzia T.
    Gull, Sana
    Kausar, Humaira
    Sarwar, Muhammad T.
    Asad, Sultan
    Shahid, Imran
    Sumrin, Aleena
    Khaliq, Saba
    Jahan, Shah
    Pervaiz, Asim
    Hassan, Sajida
    [J]. BMC GASTROENTEROLOGY, 2011, 11
  • [6] Randomized, placebo-controlled trial of pioglitazone in nondiabetic subjects with nonalcoholic steatohepatitis
    Aithal, Guruprasad P.
    Thomas, James A.
    Kaye, Philip V.
    Lawson, Adam
    Ryder, Stephen D.
    Spendlove, Ian
    Austin, Andrew S.
    Freeman, Jan G.
    Morgan, Linda
    Weeber, Jonathan
    [J]. GASTROENTEROLOGY, 2008, 135 (04) : 1176 - 1184
  • [7] Validation of a simple model for predicting liver fibrosis in HIV/hepatitis C virus-coinfected patients
    Al-Mohri, H
    Cooper, C
    Murphy, T
    Klein, MB
    [J]. HIV MEDICINE, 2005, 6 (06) : 375 - 378
  • [8] Anaparthy R, 2009, GASTROENTEROLOGY, V136, pA833
  • [9] Cost Effectiveness of Alternative Surveillance Strategies for Hepatocellular Carcinoma in Patients With Cirrhosis
    Andersson, Karin L.
    Salomon, Joshua A.
    Goldie, Sue J.
    Chung, Raymond T.
    [J]. CLINICAL GASTROENTEROLOGY AND HEPATOLOGY, 2008, 6 (12) : 1418 - 1424
  • [10] The NAFLD fibrosis score: A noninvasive system that identifies liver fibrosis in patients with NAFLD
    Angulo, Paul
    Hui, Jason M.
    Marchesini, Giulio
    Bugianesi, Ellisabetta
    George, Jacob
    Farrell, Geoffrey C.
    Enders, Felicity
    Saksena, Sushma
    Burt, Alastair D.
    Bida, John P.
    Lindor, Keith
    Sanderson, Schuyler O.
    Lenzi, Marco
    Adams, Leon A.
    Kench, James
    Therneau, Terry M.
    Day, Christopher P.
    [J]. HEPATOLOGY, 2007, 45 (04) : 846 - 854