An Economic Evaluation and Return on Investment of the Community Benefit of the Australian Pregnancy Register of Anti-Seizure Medications
Author(s)
Ademi Z1, Marquina C2, Perucca P3, Hitchcock A4, Graham J4, Liew D1, O’Brien TJ1, Vajda F4
1Monash University, Melbourne, VIC, Australia, 2Monash University, Melbourne, Australia, 3University of Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC, Australia, 4The Royal Melbourne Hospital, Melbourne, VIC, Australia
Presentation Documents
OBJECTIVES: The Raoul Wallenberg Australian Pregnancy Register (APR) was established to collect, analyse and publish data on the risks to babies exposed to anti-seizure medications (ASMs), and to facilitate quality improvements in management care over time. It is one of several prospective observational pregnancy registers of ASMs that has been established around the world. Here we aimed to evaluate the economic impacts of the APR from both societal and healthcare system perspectives.
METHODS: Using decision-analytic modelling, we estimated the effectiveness (prevention of adverse pregnancy outcomes) and costs (costs of adverse pregnancy outcomes and the register itself) of the APR over a 20-year time horizon (2000-2019). The comparator was set as the adverse pregnancy outcomes collected by the APR between 1998-2002 (i.e., no APR derived improvements in care). Adverse pregnancy outcomes included stillbirth, birth defects and induced abortion. All cost data were derived from published sources. Health and economic outcomes were extrapolated to the total target Australian epilepsy population. The primary outcomes of interest were the return of investment (ROI) for the APR and incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) in terms of cost per adverse outcome avoided.
RESULTS: Over the 20-year time horizon, the ROI from the APR from a societal perspective was AUD 2,250 (i.e. every dollar spent on the program resulted in a return of AUD2,250). Over this time, it was estimated that 9,609 adverse pregnancy outcomes were avoided, and healthcare and societal costs were reduced by AUD 191 million and AUD 9.0 billion, respectively. Hence from a health economic point of view, the APR was dominant, providing cost-saving ICERs from both perspectives.
CONCLUSIONS: Following its inception 20+ years ago, the APR has represented excellent value for investment for Australia, being cost-saving from a societal and a healthcare perspective. The APR is expected to continue to have a major impact in the foreseeable future.
Conference/Value in Health Info
Value in Health, Volume 25, Issue 12S (December 2022)
Code
EE262
Topic
Clinical Outcomes, Economic Evaluation, Epidemiology & Public Health
Topic Subcategory
Budget Impact Analysis, Clinician Reported Outcomes, Cost-comparison, Effectiveness, Utility, Benefit Analysis, Safety & Pharmacoepidemiology
Disease
SDC: Musculoskeletal Disorders (Arthritis, Bone Disorders, Osteoporosis, Other Musculoskeletal), SDC: Neurological Disorders, SDC: Pediatrics