Future medical and non-medical costs and their impact on the cost-effectiveness of life-prolonging interventions: a comparison of five European countries

Hamraz Mokri*, Ingelin Kvamme, Linda de Vries, Matthijs Versteegh, Pieter van Baal

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

8 Citations (Scopus)
24 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

When healthcare interventions prolong life, people consume medical and non-medical goods during the years of life they gain. It has been argued that the costs for medical consumption should be included in cost-effectiveness analyses from both a healthcare and societal perspective, and the costs for non-medical consumption should additionally be included when a societal perspective is applied. Standardized estimates of these so-called future costs are available in only a few countries and the impact of inclusion of these costs is likely to differ between countries. In this paper we present and compare future costs for five European countries and estimate the impact of including these costs on the cost-effectiveness of life-prolonging interventions. As countries differ in the availability of data, we illustrate how both individual- and aggregate-level data sources can be used to construct standardized estimates of future costs. Results show a large variation in costs between countries. The medical costs for the Netherlands, Germany, and the United Kingdom are large compared to Spain and Greece. Non-medical costs are higher in Germany, Spain, and the United Kingdom than in Greece. The impact of including future costs on the ICER similarly varied between countries, ranging from €1000 to €35,000 per QALY gained. The variation between countries in impact on the ICER is largest when considering medical costs and indicate differences in both structure and level of healthcare financing in these countries. Case study analyses were performed in which we highlight the large impact of including future costs on ICER relative to willingness-to-pay thresholds.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)701-715
Number of pages15
JournalEuropean Journal of Health Economics
Volume24
Issue number5
Early online date4 Aug 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jul 2023

Bibliographical note

Funding: The contribution of Hamraz Mokri was funded by Medical
Delta (the prototype to payment program, https://www.medicaldelta.
nl/en/research/medical-delta-s-journey-from-prototype-to-payment).
The contributions of Ingelin Kvamme, Pieter van Baal, and Matthijs
Versteegh work was supported grant 754936 from the Horizon 2020
research and innovation program, and was part of the COMPAR project
under work package 6. (https://self-management.eu/compar-eu-project/
work-packages/work-package-6/).

Publisher Copyright: © 2022, The Author(s).

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