PLoS ONE (Jan 2018)

Value of information analysis of an early intervention for subthreshold panic disorder: Healthcare versus societal perspective.

  • Robbin H Ophuis,
  • Joran Lokkerbol,
  • Juanita A Haagsma,
  • Mickaël Hiligsmann,
  • Silvia M A A Evers,
  • Suzanne Polinder

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0205876
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 11
p. e0205876

Abstract

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BACKGROUND:Panic disorder is associated with high productivity costs. These costs, which should be included in cost-effectiveness analyses (CEA) from a societal perspective, have a considerable impact on cost-effectiveness estimates. However, they are often omitted in published CEAs. It is therefore uncertain whether choosing a societal perspective changes priority setting in future research as compared to a healthcare perspective. OBJECTIVES:To identify research priorities regarding the cost-effectiveness of an early intervention for subthreshold panic disorder using value of information (VOI) analysis and to investigate to what extent priority setting depends on the perspective. METHODS:We calculated the cost-effectiveness of an early intervention for panic disorder from a healthcare perspective and a societal perspective. We performed a VOI analysis, which estimates the expected value of eliminating the uncertainty surrounding cost-effectiveness estimates, for both perspectives. RESULTS:From a healthcare perspective the early intervention was more effective at higher costs compared to usual care (€17,144 per QALY), whereas it was cost-saving from a societal perspective. Additional research to eliminate parameter uncertainty was valued at €129.7 million from a healthcare perspective and €29.5 million from a societal perspective. Additional research on the early intervention utility gain was most valuable from a healthcare perspective, whereas from a societal perspective additional research would generate little added value. CONCLUSIONS:Priority setting for future research differed substantially according to the perspective. Our study underlines that the health-economic perspective of CEAs on interventions for panic disorder must be chosen carefully in order to avoid inappropriate choices in research priorities.