Estimating cost-effectiveness from claims and registry data with measured and unmeasured confounders

Author:

Handorf Elizabeth A1ORCID,Heitjan Daniel F2,Bekelman Justin E3,Mitra Nandita4

Affiliation:

1. Fox Chase Cancer Center, Philadelphia, PA, USA

2. Southern Methodist University and University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX, USA

3. Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA

4. University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA

Abstract

The analysis of observational data to determine the cost-effectiveness of medical treatments is complicated by the need to account for skewness, censoring, and the effects of measured and unmeasured confounders. We quantify cost-effectiveness as the Net Monetary Benefit (NMB), a linear combination of the treatment effects on cost and effectiveness that denominates utility in monetary terms. We propose a parametric estimation approach that describes cost with a Gamma generalized linear model and survival time (the canonical effectiveness variable) with a Weibull accelerated failure time model. To account for correlation between cost and survival, we propose a bootstrap procedure to compute confidence intervals for NMB. To examine sensitivity to unmeasured confounders, we derive simple approximate relationships between naïve parameters, assuming only measured confounders, and the values those parameters would take if there was further adjustment for a single unmeasured confounder with a specified distribution. A simulation study shows that the method returns accurate estimates for treatment effects on cost, survival, and NMB under the assumed model. We apply our method to compare two treatments for Stage II/III bladder cancer, concluding that the NMB is sensitive to hypothesized unmeasured confounders that represent smoking status and personal income.

Funder

U.S. Public Health Service

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Health Information Management,Statistics and Probability,Epidemiology

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