Expert Review of Vaccines (Dec 2024)

Cost-effectiveness analysis of 20-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine for routine pediatric vaccination programs in Japan

  • Masayoshi Shinjoh,
  • Kanae Togo,
  • Tomoyuki Hayamizu,
  • Naohiro Yonemoto,
  • Junko Morii,
  • Johnna Perdrizet,
  • Kazumasa Kamei

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/14760584.2024.2345670
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 1
pp. 485 – 497

Abstract

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Background The Japanese National Immunization Program currently includes the pediatric 13 valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV13) to prevent pneumococcal infections. We aimed to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of 20-valent PCV (PCV20) as a pediatric vaccine versus PCV13.Methods A decision-analytic Markov model was used to estimate expected costs, quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs), and prevented cases and deaths caused by invasive pneumococcal disease, pneumonia, and acute otitis media over a ten-year time horizon from the societal and healthcare payer perspectives.Results PCV20 was dominant, i.e. less costly and more effective, over PCV13 (gained 294,599 QALYs and reduced Japanese yen [JPY] 352.6 billion [2.6 billion United States dollars, USD] from the societal perspective and JPY 178.9 billion [USD 1.4 billion] from the payer perspective). Sensitivity and scenario analyses validated the robustness of the base scenario results. When comparing PCV20 with PCV13, the threshold analysis revealed an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio that was within the threshold value (JPY 5 million/QALY) at a maximum acquisition cost of JPY 74,033 [USD 563] (societal perspective) and JPY 67,758 [USD 515] (payer perspective).Conclusions As a pediatric vaccine, PCV20 was dominant over PCV13 regardless of the study perspective.

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