Potential economic and clinical implications of improving access to snake antivenom in five ASEAN countries: A cost-effectiveness analysis

Author:

Patikorn Chanthawat,Ismail Ahmad Khaldun,Zainal Abidin Syafiq Asnawi,Othman Iekhsan,Chaiyakunapruk Nathorn,Taychakhoonavudh SuthiraORCID

Abstract

Background Despite domestic production of antivenoms in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) countries, not all victims with snakebite envenomings indicated for antivenom received the appropriate or adequate effective dose of antivenom due to insufficient supply and inadequate access to antivenoms. We aimed to conduct a cost-effectiveness analysis to project the potential economic and clinical impact of improving access to antivenoms when all snakebite envenomings in ASEAN countries were hypothetically treated with geographically appropriate antivenoms. Methodology Using a decision analytic model with input parameters from published literature, local data, and expert opinion, we projected the impact of “full access” (100%) to antivenom, compared to “current access” in five most impacted ASEAN countries, including Indonesia (10%), Philippines (26%), Vietnam (37%), Lao PDR (4%), and Myanmar (64%), from a societal perspective with a lifetime time horizon. Sensitivity analyses were performed. Principal findings In base-case analyses, full access compared to current access to snake antivenom in the five countries resulted in a total of 9,362 deaths averted (-59%), 230,075 disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) averted (-59%), and cost savings of 1.3 billion USD (-53%). Incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) of improving access to antivenom found higher outcomes but lower costs in all countries. Probabilistic sensitivity analyses of 1,000 iterations found that 98.1–100% of ICERs were cost-saving. Conclusion/Significance Improving access to snake antivenom will result in cost-saving for ASEAN countries. Our findings emphasized the importance of further strengthening regional cooperation, investment, and funding to improve the situation of snakebite victims in ASEAN countries.

Funder

Wellcome Trust

Second Century Fund (C2F), Chulalongkorn University

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference43 articles.

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4. Estimating economic and disease burden of snakebite in ASEAN countries using a decision analytic model.;C Patikorn;PLoS Negl Trop Dis,2022

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