Abstract
AbstractBackgroundDecision-makers in middle-income countries need evidence on the cost-effectiveness of COVID-19 booster doses and oral antivirals to appropriately prioritise these healthcare interventions.MethodsWe used a dynamic transmission model to assess the cost-effectiveness of COVID-19 booster doses and oral antivirals in Fiji, Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, and Timor-Leste. We conducted cost-effectiveness analysis from both healthcare and societal perspectives using 3% discounting for ongoing costs and health benefits. We developed an interactive R Shiny which allows the user to vary key model assumptions, such as the choice of discounting rate, and view how these assumptions affect model results.FindingsBooster doses were cost saving and therefore cost-effective in all four middle-income settings from both healthcare and societal perspectives using 3% discounting. Providing oral antivirals was cost-effective from a healthcare perspective if procured at a low generic ($25 United States Dollars) or middle-income reference price ($250 United States Dollars); however, their cost-effectiveness was strongly influenced by rates of wastage or misuse, and the ongoing costs of care for patients hospitalised with COVID-19. Interestingly, the cost or wastage of rapid antigen tests did not appear strongly influential over the cost-effectiveness of oral antivirals in any of the four study settings.ConclusionsOur results support that government funded COVID-19 booster programs continue to be cost-effective in middle-income settings. Oral antivirals demonstrate the potential to be cost-effective if procured at or below a middle-income reference price of $250 USD per schedule. Further research should quantify the rates of wastage or misuse of oral COVID-19 antivirals in middle-income settings.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Reference64 articles.
1. SeroTracker: a global SARS-CoV-2 seroprevalence dashboard
2. An interactive web-based dashboard to track COVID-19 in real time
3. World Health Organization. WHO SAGE roadmap on uses of COVID-19 vaccines in the context of OMICRON and substantial population immunity: an approach to optimize the global impact of COVID-19 vaccines at a time when Omicron and its sub-lineages are the dominant circulating variants of concern, based on public health goals, evolving epidemiology, and increasing population-level immunity, first issued 20 October 2020, updated: 13 November 2020, updated: 16 July 2021, update: 21 January 2022, latest update: 30 March 2023. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2023 Contract No.: WHO/2019-nCoV/Vaccines/SAGE/Prioritization/2023.1.
4. Projecting the COVID-19 immune landscape in Japan in the presence of waning immunity and booster vaccination
5. Number needed to vaccinate with a COVID-19 booster to prevent a COVID-19-associated hospitalization during SARS-CoV-2 Omicron BA.1 variant predominance, December 2021–February 2022, VISION Network: a retrospective cohort study