Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics (Nov 2022)

Cost-utility and cost-benefit analysis of pediatric PCV programs in Egypt

  • JP Sevilla,
  • Daria Burnes,
  • Rehab Zakaria El Saie,
  • Hammam Haridy,
  • Matt Wasserman,
  • Sarah Pugh,
  • Johnna Perdrizet,
  • David Bloom

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/21645515.2022.2114252
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 6

Abstract

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New vaccine introductions (NVIs) raise issues of value for money (VfM) for self-financing middle-income countries like Egypt. We evaluate a pediatric pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV) NVI in Egypt from health payer and societal perspectives, using cost-utility and cost-benefit analysis (CUA, CBA). We evaluate vaccinating 100 successive birth cohorts with the 13-valent PCV (“PCV13”) and the 10-valent PCV (“PCV10”) relative to no vaccination and each other. We quantify health effects with a disease incidence projection model and a multiple-cohort static disease model. Our CBA uses a health-augmented lifecycle model to generate willingness-to-pay for health gains from which we calculate rates of return (RoR). We obtain parameters from the published literature. We perform deterministic and probabilistic sensitivity analysis. Our base-case CUA finds incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) for PCV13 and PCV10 relative to no program of $926 (95% confidence interval $512–$1,735) and $1,984 ($1,186-$3,805) per quality-adjusted life year (QALY), respectively; and for PCV13 relative to PCV10 of $174 ($88-$331) per QALY. Our base-case CBA finds RoRs to PCV13 and PCV10 relative to no program of 488% (188–993%) and 164% (33–336%), respectively, and to PCV13 relative to PCV10 of 3109% (1410–6602%). Both CUA and CBA find PCV13 to be good VfM relative to PCV10.

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