Cost Effectiveness and Resource Allocation (Apr 2024)

Health economic evaluation of blended collaborative care for older multimorbid heart failure patients: study protocol

  • Lisa Derendorf,
  • Stephanie Stock,
  • Dusan Simic,
  • Arim Shukri,
  • Christine Zelenak,
  • Jonas Nagel,
  • Tim Friede,
  • Birgit Herbeck Belnap,
  • Christoph Herrmann-Lingen,
  • Susanne S. Pedersen,
  • Jan Sørensen,
  • Dirk Müller and on behalf of the ESCAPE consortium

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12962-024-00535-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Background Integrated care, in particular the ‘Blended Collaborative Care (BCC)’ strategy, may have the potential to improve health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in multimorbid patients with heart failure (HF) and psychosocial burden at no or low additional cost. The ESCAPE trial is a randomised controlled trial for the evaluation of a BCC approach in five European countries. For the economic evaluation of alongside this trial, the four main objectives were: (i) to document the costs of delivering the intervention, (ii) to assess the running costs across study sites, (iii) to evaluate short-term cost-effectiveness and cost-utility compared to providers’ usual care, and (iv) to examine the budgetary implications. Methods The trial-based economic analyses will include cross-country cost-effectiveness and cost-utility assessments from a payer perspective. The cost-utility analysis will calculate quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) using the EQ-5D-5L and national value sets. Cost-effectiveness will include the cost per hospital admission avoided and the cost per depression-free days (DFD). Resource use will be measured from different sources, including electronic medical health records, standardised questionnaires, patient receipts and a care manager survey. Uncertainty will be addressed using bootstrapping. Discussion The various methods and approaches used for data acquisition should provide insights into the potential benefits and cost-effectiveness of a BCC intervention. Providing the economic evaluation of ESCAPE will contribute to a country-based structural and organisational planning of BCC (e.g., the number of patients that may benefit, how many care managers are needed). Improved care is expected to enhance health-related quality of life at little or no extra cost. Trial registration The study follows CHEERS2022 and is registered at the German Clinical Trials Register (DRKS00025120).

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