1. Cost‐effectiveness of using hepatitis C viremic hearts for transplantation into HCV‐negative recipients
- Author
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Logan, Cathy, Yumul, Ily, Cepeda, Javier, Pretorius, Victor, Adler, Eric, Aslam, Saima, and Martin, Natasha K
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Immunology ,Health Disparities ,Cost Effectiveness Research ,Digestive Diseases ,Liver Disease ,Hepatitis - C ,Infectious Diseases ,Cardiovascular ,Chronic Liver Disease and Cirrhosis ,Health Services ,Minority Health ,Hepatitis ,Clinical Research ,Comparative Effectiveness Research ,Burden of Illness ,Transplantation ,Emerging Infectious Diseases ,Organ Transplantation ,Good Health and Well Being ,Antiviral Agents ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,Hepacivirus ,Hepatitis C ,Humans ,Viremia ,clinical research/practice ,economics ,health services and outcomes research ,heart transplantation/cardiology ,infection and infectious agents - viral: hepatitis C ,infectious disease ,mathematical model ,organ acceptance ,organ procurement and allocation ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Surgery ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
Outcomes following hepatitis C virus (HCV)-viremic heart transplantation into HCV-negative recipients with HCV treatment are good. We assessed cost-effectiveness between cohorts of transplant recipients willing and unwilling to receive HCV-viremic hearts. Markov model simulated long-term outcomes among HCV-negative patients on the transplant waitlist. We compared costs (2018 USD) and health outcomes (quality-adjusted life-years, QALYs) between cohorts willing to accept any heart and those willing to accept only HCV-negative hearts. We assumed 4.9% HCV-viremic donor prevalence. Patients receiving HCV-viremic hearts were treated, assuming $39 600/treatment with 95% cure. Incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) were compared to a $100 000/QALY gained willingness-to-pay threshold. Sensitivity analyses included stratification by blood type or region and potential negative consequences of receipt of HCV-viremic hearts. Compared to accepting only HCV-negative hearts, accepting any heart gained 0.14 life-years and 0.11 QALYs, while increasing costs by $9418/patient. Accepting any heart was cost effective (ICER $85 602/QALY gained). Results were robust to all transplant regions and blood types, except type AB. Accepting any heart remained cost effective provided posttransplant mortality and costs among those receiving HCV-viremic hearts were not >7% higher compared to HCV-negative hearts. Willingness to accept HCV-viremic hearts for transplantation into HCV-negative recipients is cost effective and improves clinical outcomes.
- Published
- 2021