Cost-effectiveness and Budgetary Impact of Hepatitis C Virus Testing, Treatment, and Linkage to Care in US Prisons

Author:

Assoumou Sabrina A12,Tasillo Abriana1,Vellozzi Claudia3,Eftekhari Yazdi Golnaz1,Wang Jianing1,Nolen Shayla1,Hagan Liesl4,Thompson William4,Randall Liisa M5,Strick Lara67,Salomon Joshua A8,Linas Benjamin P129

Affiliation:

1. Section of Infectious Disease, Department of Medicine, Boston Medical Center, Massachusetts

2. Section of Infectious Disease, Department of Medicine, Boston University School of Medicine, Massachusetts

3. Grady Health System, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia

4. Prevention Branch, Division of Viral Hepatitis, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia

5. Massachusetts Department of Public Health, Boston

6. Division of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle

7. Washington State Department of Corrections, Tumwater

8. Stanford University School of Medicine, California

9. Department of Epidemiology, Boston University School of Public Health, Massachusetts

Abstract

Abstract Background Hepatitis C virus (HCV) testing and treatment uptake in prisons remains low. We aimed to estimate clinical outcomes, cost-effectiveness (CE), and budgetary impact (BI) of HCV testing and treatment in United States (US) prisons or linkage to care at release. Methods We used individual-based simulation modeling with healthcare and Department of Corrections (DOC) perspectives for CE and BI analyses, respectively. We simulated a US prison cohort at entry using published data and Washington State DOC individual-level data. We considered permutations of testing (risk factor based, routine at entry or at release, no testing), treatment (if liver fibrosis stage ≥F3, for all HCV infected or no treatment), and linkage to care (at release or no linkage). Outcomes included quality-adjusted life-years (QALY); cases identified, treated, and cured; cirrhosis cases avoided; incremental cost-effectiveness ratios; DOC costs (2016 US dollars); and BI (healthcare cost/prison entrant) to generalize to other states. Results Compared to “no testing, no treatment, and no linkage to care,” the “test all, treat all, and linkage to care at release” model increased the lifetime sustained virologic response by 23%, reduced cirrhosis cases by 54% at a DOC annual additional cost of $1440 per prison entrant, and would be cost-effective. At current drug prices, targeted testing and liver fibrosis–based treatment provided worse outcomes at higher cost or worse outcomes at higher cost per QALY gained. In sensitivity analysis, fibrosis-based treatment restrictions were cost-effective at previous higher drug costs. Conclusions Although costly, widespread testing and treatment in prisons is considered to be of good value at current drug prices.

Funder

CDC

National Center for HIV

Viral Hepatitis

STD, and TB Prevention Epidemiologic and Economic Modeling Agreement

National Institute on Drug Abuse

National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Microbiology (medical)

Reference36 articles.

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