Health economic evaluation of blended collaborative care for older multimorbid heart failure patients: study protocol

Author:

Derendorf LisaORCID,Stock StephanieORCID,Simic DusanORCID,Shukri ArimORCID,Zelenak ChristineORCID,Nagel JonasORCID,Friede TimORCID,Herbeck Belnap BirgitORCID,Herrmann-Lingen ChristophORCID,Pedersen Susanne S.ORCID,Sørensen Jan,Müller and on behalf of the ESCAPE DirkORCID

Abstract

Abstract Background Integrated care, in particular the ‘Blended Collaborative Care (BCC)’ strategy, may have the potential to improve health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in multimorbid patients with heart failure (HF) and psychosocial burden at no or low additional cost. The ESCAPE trial is a randomised controlled trial for the evaluation of a BCC approach in five European countries. For the economic evaluation of alongside this trial, the four main objectives were: (i) to document the costs of delivering the intervention, (ii) to assess the running costs across study sites, (iii) to evaluate short-term cost-effectiveness and cost-utility compared to providers’ usual care, and (iv) to examine the budgetary implications. Methods The trial-based economic analyses will include cross-country cost-effectiveness and cost-utility assessments from a payer perspective. The cost-utility analysis will calculate quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) using the EQ-5D-5L and national value sets. Cost-effectiveness will include the cost per hospital admission avoided and the cost per depression-free days (DFD). Resource use will be measured from different sources, including electronic medical health records, standardised questionnaires, patient receipts and a care manager survey. Uncertainty will be addressed using bootstrapping. Discussion The various methods and approaches used for data acquisition should provide insights into the potential benefits and cost-effectiveness of a BCC intervention. Providing the economic evaluation of ESCAPE will contribute to a country-based structural and organisational planning of BCC (e.g., the number of patients that may benefit, how many care managers are needed). Improved care is expected to enhance health-related quality of life at little or no extra cost. Trial registration The study follows CHEERS2022 and is registered at the German Clinical Trials Register (DRKS00025120).

Funder

Universitätsklinikum Köln

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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