Journal of Medical Internet Research (May 2021)

Guided Internet-Based Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia: Health-Economic Evaluation From the Societal and Public Health Care Perspective Alongside a Randomized Controlled Trial

  • Buntrock, Claudia,
  • Lehr, Dirk,
  • Smit, Filip,
  • Horvath, Hanne,
  • Berking, Matthias,
  • Spiegelhalder, Kai,
  • Riper, Heleen,
  • Ebert, David Daniel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2196/25609
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 5
p. e25609

Abstract

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BackgroundThe evidence base for internet-based cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (iCBT-I) is firm; however, little is known about iCBT-I’s health-economic effects. ObjectiveThis study aimed to evaluate the cost-effectiveness and cost–utility of iCBT-I in reducing insomnia among schoolteachers. MethodsSchoolteachers (N=128) with clinically significant insomnia symptoms and work-related rumination were randomized to guided iCBT-I or a wait list control group, both with unrestricted access to treatment as usual. Health care use, patient and family expenditures, and productivity losses were self-assessed and used for costing from a societal and a public health care perspective. Costs were related to symptom-free status (score <8 on the insomnia severity index) and quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) gained. Sampling error was handled using nonparametric bootstrapping. ResultsStatistically significant differences favoring the intervention group were found for both health outcomes (symptom-free status yes or no: β=.30; 95% CI 0.16-0.43; QALYs: β=.019, 95% CI 0.01-0.03). From a societal perspective, iCBT-I had a 94% probability of dominating the wait list control for both health outcomes. From a public health care perspective, iCBT-I was more effective but also more expensive than the wait list control, resulting in an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of €650 per symptom-free individual. In terms of QALYs, the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio was €11,285. At a willingness-to-pay threshold of €20,000 per QALY gained, the intervention’s probability of being cost-effective was 89%. ConclusionsOur trial indicates that iCBT could be considered as a good value-for-money intervention for insomnia. Trial RegistrationGerman Clinical Trial Registry: DRKS00004700; https://tinyurl.com/2nnk57jm International Registered Report Identifier (IRRID)RR2-10.1186/1745-6215-14-169