Cost-effectiveness of school-based caries screening using transillumination

被引:0
|
作者
Schwendicke, Falk [1 ]
Bombeck, Lisa [1 ]
机构
[1] Charite Univ Med Berlin, Dept Oral Diagnost Digital Hlth & Hlth Serv Res, Berlin, Germany
关键词
Caries; Caries detection/diagnosis/prevention; Computer simulation; Dental; Decision-making; Economic evaluation; Radiology; INFRARED LIGHT TRANSILLUMINATION; DENTAL ATTENDANCE; ORAL-HEALTH; LESIONS; DECAY;
D O I
10.1016/j.jdent.2023.104635
中图分类号
R78 [口腔科学];
学科分类号
1003 ;
摘要
Objectives: School-based screening for caries lesions usually only employs visual-tactile detection means (stan-dard of care). Near-infrared-light-transillumination (NILT) could be used to support school-based screening and to identify early proximal caries, facilitating referral and appropriate non-or micro-invasive management in dental practice.Method: We assessed the cost-effectiveness of NILT for school-based caries screening. A German mixed-payers' perspective was adopted. A Markov model was used to simulate the consequences of true and false positive and negative detections and the subsequent decisions over the lifetime of initially 12 years old patients. Our health outcome was tooth retention in years. Costs were measured in Euro 2020. Monte-Carlo-microsimulations, univariate and probabilistic sensitivity analyses were conducted. The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) and the cost-effectiveness-acceptability at different willingness-to-pay-thresholds were quantified.Results: NILT was minimally more effective (tooth retention for a mean (2.5-97.5%) 56 (53-59) years) and minimally less costly (515 (416-616) Euro) than standard of care (56 (50-59) years; 526 (427-628 Euro)). The ICER was-503 Euro/year, i.e. school-based caries screening using NILT saved money at higher effectiveness in the modelled population. The cost-effectiveness of NILT increased for payers with a willingness-to-pay for additional tooth retention time. The biggest driver of costs were (avoided) tooth replacements later in life.Conclusions: NILT-based screening is likely to yield limited effectiveness gains and cost savings in the modelled populations. In countries where regular practice-based screening of children is less common than in Germany, the cost-effectiveness of NILT for school-based caries screening is likely higher.Clinical significance: NILT-based caries screening in German schools is unlikely to be cost-effective. In countries with different utilization patterns or generally higher caries prevalence and risk, this may differ.
引用
收藏
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] The Costs and Cost-Effectiveness of a School-Based Comprehensive Intervention Study on Childhood Obesity in China
    Meng, Liping
    Xu, Haiquan
    Liu, Ailing
    van Raaij, Joop
    Bemelmans, Wanda
    Hu, Xiaoqi
    Zhang, Qian
    Du, Songming
    Fang, Hongyun
    Ma, Jun
    Xu, Guifa
    Li, Ying
    Guo, Hongwei
    Du, Lin
    Ma, Guansheng
    [J]. PLOS ONE, 2013, 8 (10):
  • [42] Systematic review on cost-effectiveness analysis of school-based oral health promotion program
    Rochmah, Thinni Nurul
    Ramadhani, Aulia
    Bramantoro, Taufan
    Permata, Lucindari Gea
    Tun, Tin Zar
    [J]. PLOS ONE, 2023, 18 (04):
  • [43] Cost and cost-effectiveness of a school-based education program to reduce salt intake in children and their families in China
    Li, Xian
    Jan, Stephen
    Yan, Lijing L.
    Hayes, Alison
    Chu, Yunbo
    Wang, Haijun
    Feng, Xiangxian
    Niu, Wenyi
    He, Feng J.
    Ma, Jun
    Han, Yanbo
    MacGregor, Graham A.
    Wu, Yangfeng
    [J]. PLOS ONE, 2017, 12 (09):
  • [44] Cost Effectiveness of Interferon-Gamma Release Assay for School-Based Tuberculosis Screening
    Akiko Kowada
    [J]. Molecular Diagnosis & Therapy, 2012, 16 : 181 - 190
  • [45] Cost Effectiveness of Interferon-Gamma Release Assay for School-Based Tuberculosis Screening
    Kowada, Akiko
    [J]. MOLECULAR DIAGNOSIS & THERAPY, 2012, 16 (03) : 181 - 190
  • [46] COST-EFFECTIVENESS OF SCREENING
    POLE, JD
    [J]. PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF MEDICINE-LONDON, 1971, 64 (12): : 1256 - &
  • [47] Cost-effectiveness of a school-based obesity prevention program (vol 78, pg 619, 2008)
    Wang, L. Y.
    Gutin, B.
    Barbeau, P.
    Moore, J. B.
    Hanes, J., Jr.
    Johnson, M. H.
    Cavnar, M.
    Thornburg, J.
    Yin, Z.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF SCHOOL HEALTH, 2009, 79 (02) : 89 - 89
  • [48] Cost-effectiveness and return on investment of school-based health promotion programmes for chronic disease prevention
    Ekwaru, John P.
    Ohinmaa, Arto
    Dabravolskaj, Julia
    Maximova, Katerina
    Veugelers, Paul J.
    [J]. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 2021, 31 (06): : 1183 - 1189
  • [49] COST-EFFECTIVENESS OF SCHOOL-BASED HEALTH PROMOTION IN CANADA: A LIFE-COURSE MODELING APPROACH
    Tran, B.
    Ohinmaa, A.
    Kuhle, S.
    Johnson, J. A.
    Veugelers, P.
    [J]. VALUE IN HEALTH, 2013, 16 (07) : A391 - A391
  • [50] Cost-effectiveness of School Hearing Screening Programs: A Scoping Review
    Yong, Michael
    Liang, Jiahe
    Ballreich, Jeromie
    Lea, Jane
    Westerberg, Brian D.
    Emmett, Susan D.
    [J]. OTOLARYNGOLOGY-HEAD AND NECK SURGERY, 2020, 162 (06) : 826 - 838