A Cost-Effectiveness Analysis of Epinephrine Autoinjector Risk Stratification for Patients with Food Allergy-One Epinephrine Autoinjector or Two?

被引:22
|
作者
Shaker, Marcus [1 ,2 ]
Turner, Paul J. [3 ]
Greenhawt, Matthew [4 ]
机构
[1] Dartmouth Hitchcock Med Ctr, Sect Allergy & Immunol, Lebanon, NH 03766 USA
[2] Dartmouth Geisel Sch Med, Hanover, NH USA
[3] Imperial Coll London, Natl Heart & Lung Inst, Sect Inflammat Repair & Dev, London, England
[4] Univ Colorado, Sch Med, Childrens Hosp Colorado,Dept Pediat, Sect Allergy & Immunol,Food Challenge & Res Unit, Aurora, CO USA
关键词
Food allergy; Anaphylaxis; Risk stratification; Epinephrine; Epinephrine autoinjectors; Cost-effectiveness analysis; Fatality; NATURAL-HISTORY; PEANUT ALLERGY; ANAPHYLAXIS; HEALTH; RECOMMENDATIONS; PREDICTORS; CHILDREN; IMPACT;
D O I
10.1016/j.jaip.2021.01.007
中图分类号
R392 [医学免疫学];
学科分类号
100102 ;
摘要
BACKGROUND: Food-allergic patients are routinely prescribed 2 epinephrine autoinjectors (EAIs). The cost-effectiveness of this strategy is unknown. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of routinely prescribing all patients 2 EAI devices versus a risk-stratified approach (2 EAIs prescribed only for patients with a risk factor). METHODS: Markov models compared universal versus risk-stratified approaches on the basis of either a previous medical history of anaphylaxis (PMH-ana) or anaphylaxis requiring multiple epinephrine doses (multi-epi). Cohorts of children with peanut allergy were evaluated over an 80-year time horizon from both US and UK societal and health care perspectives. Models assumed prescribing a second EAI provided a baseline 10-fold risk reduction versus anaphylaxis-related fatality and hospitalization. Cost-effectiveness threshold was $100,000/qualityadjusted life-year (QALY). RESULTS: From a US perspective, universal prescription of 2 EAIs to all patients with peanut allergy was not cost-effective in the base case versus risk stratification by PMH-ana. Universal prescription of 2 EAIs was associated with an incremental cost of $10,696,036/QALY versus the PMH-ana strategy, and $17,514,558/QALY versus the multi-epi strategy. However, the universal strategy became cost-effective versus a multi-epi strategy when single EAI costs were less than $80, second epinephrine dose requirements more than 25.5%, anaphylaxis hospitalization costs more than $18,453, annual anaphylaxis risk more than 76.5%, or anaphylaxis hospitalization rate more than 74.9%. From a UK perspective, universally prescribing 2 EAIs was also not cost-effective (incremental cost of $4,132,440/QALY vs PMH-ana and $6,208,227/QALY vs multi-epi) at single device costs more than $18. CONCLUSIONS: At current EAI prices and low rates of needing 2 devices, limiting the second EAIs to patients with PMH-ana is more cost-effective than routinely prescribing 2 EAIs to all patients (particularly in resource-constrained settings). (C) 2021 American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology
引用
收藏
页码:2440 / +
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Epinephrine autoinjector availability among children with food allergy
    DeMuth, Karen A.
    Fitzpatrick, Anne M.
    [J]. ALLERGY AND ASTHMA PROCEEDINGS, 2011, 32 (04) : 295 - 300
  • [2] Food Allergy Trends and Epinephrine Autoinjector Presence in Summer Camps
    Schellpfeffer, Natalie R.
    Leo, Harvey L.
    Ambrose, Michael
    Hashikawa, Andrew N.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ALLERGY AND CLINICAL IMMUNOLOGY-IN PRACTICE, 2017, 5 (02): : 358 - 362
  • [3] Parental knowledge of anaphylaxis treatment and epinephrine autoinjector for children with food allergy
    Contreras-Porta, J.
    Ruiz-Baques, A.
    Capel, F.
    Arino, M.
    Zorrozua, A.
    Lopez-Serrano, M.
    [J]. ALLERGY, 2013, 68 : 321 - 321
  • [4] A pilot study assessing adequacy of epinephrine autoinjector needle length to deliver epinephrine intramuscularly in adult patients with food and venom allergy
    Tsai, G.
    Kim, L.
    Dominic, A.
    Nevis, I. F.
    Potts, R.
    Chiu, J.
    Kim, H.
    [J]. ALLERGY, 2013, 68 : 569 - 569
  • [5] The cost-effectiveness of requiring universal vs contextual self-injectable epinephrine autoinjector for allergen immunotherapy
    Sun, Di
    Cafone, Joseph
    Shaker, Marcus
    Greenhawt, Matthew
    [J]. ANNALS OF ALLERGY ASTHMA & IMMUNOLOGY, 2019, 123 (06) : 582 - 589
  • [6] Cost-Effectiveness of Watchful Waiting vs Immediate Emergency Department Transfer After Epinephrine Autoinjector Use in Canada
    Yin, Yiwei
    Shoshan, Moshe
    Shaker, Marcus
    Greenhawt, Matthew
    Johnson, Kate
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ALLERGY AND CLINICAL IMMUNOLOGY, 2024, 153 (02) : AB204 - AB204
  • [7] Self-assessment of skills for use of epinephrine autoinjector in patients at high risk of anaphylaxis
    Faure, A.
    Chatain, C.
    Jacquier, J. P.
    Boccon-Gibod, I.
    Bouillet, L.
    Pralong, P.
    Leccia, M. T.
    Bocquet, A.
    [J]. ALLERGY, 2023, 78
  • [8] The Evaluation of a Food Allergy and Epinephrine Autoinjector Training Program for Personnel Who Care for Children in Schools and Community Settings
    Wahl, Ann
    Stephens, Hilary
    Ruffo, Mark
    Jones, Amanda L.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF SCHOOL NURSING, 2015, 31 (02): : 91 - 98
  • [9] Epinephrine Autoinjector Use One Year after Training: A Randomised Controlled Comparison of Two Different Devices
    Boyle, Robert J.
    Procktor, Annabella
    Hodes, Matthew
    Smith, Jared G.
    Gore, Claudia
    Cox, Helen E.
    Turner, Paul J.
    Marrs, Tom
    Hanna, Heather
    Phillips, Katherine
    Warner, John O.
    Pinto, Camila
    Umasunthar, Thisayanagam
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ALLERGY AND CLINICAL IMMUNOLOGY, 2015, 135 (02) : AB209 - AB209
  • [10] One-year sustained impact of supervised epinephrine autoinjector administration during food challenge on parent confidence
    Soller, Lianne
    Teoh, Timothy
    Baerg, Ingrid
    Wong, Tiffany
    Chan, Edmond S.
    [J]. ANNALS OF ALLERGY ASTHMA & IMMUNOLOGY, 2020, 125 (06) : 705 - 707