Abstract
Objectives
In 2016, Chile implemented a pilot project in 2 Santiago-area family health centers aimed at improving hypertension control using the HEARTS framework for cardiovascular disease prevention. The core intervention replaced nonstandardized, single-medication regimens with standardized treatment using fixed-dose combination pills. Although prior studies demonstrate improved blood pressure control with fixed-dose combination pills, evidence on cost-effectiveness is essential for scalability.
Methods
A 10-year outcomes-based Markov model was used to assess the benefits and costs of the HEARTS approach versus usual care from a societal perspective. Incremental program costs were estimated via activity-based costing, and incremental benefits from reductions in acute CVD events. The cost-effectiveness was quantified using incremental benefit-cost ratios and incremental cost per averted disability-adjusted life-year.
Results
Although the HEARTS approach led to higher initial medication costs, averted CVD events generated net savings over time. The incremental benefit-cost ratio was estimated to exceed 1 by year 2 and reached 7.8 by year 10, showing that incremental benefits would exceed costs at an increasing rate over time. The cost per disability-adjusted life-year averted in model year 10 was approximately $2171, demonstrating high cost-effectiveness compared with the per-capita gross domestic product threshold.
Conclusions
The HEARTS approach in Chile, which uses a standardized hypertension treatment protocol with fixed-dose combination pills, was estimated to be highly cost-effective compared with usual care. It generates substantial net savings over time from estimated reductions in the incidence of acute cardiovascular disease events.
Authors
Luis Michea Thomas T. Kim Brian Hutchinson Luis Toro Maria C. Escobar Soumava Basu Muhammad Jami Husain Andrew E. Moran Pedro Ordunez Deliana Kostova