Abstract
Objectives
To evaluate cost-effectiveness of 10-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine in the routine immunization program for children younger than 5 years in Brazil by a postintroduction study.
Methods
Ecological study of prevaccine (2006–2009) versus postvaccine (2011–2014) period related the changes in mortality rate and hospitalization rate to direct cost of pneumonia treatment from the payer’s perspective to estimate the cost-effectiveness regarding lives saved, life-years gained, and disability-adjusted life-year for children younger than 5 years in the southern Brazilian state of Santa Catarina. All-cause pneumonia (ICD-10 J12-J18) deaths, hospital admissions, and associated costs were retrieved from the Brazilian Ministry of Health official Web site. Life expectancy at birth, population, ambulatory costs, cost savings, and plausible range of these parameters were used from published sources. Computer simulations with sensitivity analysis were performed to obtain the cost-effectiveness estimates.
Results
About 27 lives were saved and 2573 hospitalizations averted by the 10-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine vaccination in the 2011 to 2014 period at the cost of US $24,348 per life-year gained and US $27,748 per disability-adjusted life-year. The latter cost is 81% of Brazilian gross domestic product per capita over the same period.
Conclusions
The vaccine was very cost-effective according to the World Health Organization criterion.
Authors
Emil Kupek Ilse Viertel
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