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Enhancing the Detection and Care of Heterozygous Familial Hypercholesterolemia in Primary Care: Cost-Effectiveness and Return on Investment

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-21, 17:26 authored by Marquina, C, Morton, J, Brett, T, Lloyd, M, Janette RadfordJanette Radford, Heal, C, Gill, G, Sullivan, D, Zomer, E, Li, I, Pang, J, Watts, GF, Ademi, Z
<p><strong>Background:</strong> Heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia (HeFH) is under-detected and undertreated. A general practitioner-led screening and care program for HeFH effectively identified and managed patients with HeFH. We evaluated the cost-effectiveness and the return on investment of an enhanced-care strategy for HeFH in primary care in Australia.</p> <p><strong>Methods:</strong> We developed a multistate Markov model to estimate the outcomes and costs of a general practitioner-led detection and management strategy for HeFH in primary care compared with the standard of care in Australia. The population comprised individuals aged 50 to 80 years, of which 44% had prior cardiovascular disease. Cardiovascular risk, HeFH prevalence, treatment effects, and acute and chronic health care costs were derived from published sources. The study involved screening for HeFH using a validated data-extraction tool (TARB-Ex), followed by a consultation to improve care. The detection rate of HeFH was 16%, and 74% of the patients achieved target LDL-C (low-density lipoprotein cholesterol). Quality-adjusted life years, health care costs, productivity losses, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, and return on investment ratio were evaluated, outcomes discounted by 5% annually, adopting a health care and a societal perspective.</p> <p><strong>Results:</strong> Over the lifetime horizon, the model estimated a gain of 870 years of life lived and 1033 quality-adjusted life years when the general practitioner-led program was employed compared with standard of care. This resulted in an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of AU$14 664/quality-adjusted life year gained from a health care perspective. From a societal perspective, this strategy, compared with standard of care was cost-saving, with a return on investment of AU$5.64 per dollar invested.</p> <p><strong>Conclusions:</strong> An enhanced general practitioner-led model of care for HeFH is likely to be cost-effective.</p>

Funding

National Health & Medical Research Council

Deakin University

James Cook University

Primary Health Tasmania

University of Notre Dame Australia

University of Western Australia

History

Publication title

Circulation: Genomic and Precision Medicine

Pagination

1-8

ISSN

2574-8300

Department/School

Tasmanian School of Medicine

Publisher

Lippincott Williams & Wilkins

Place of publication

United States

Socio-economic Objectives

Health system performance (incl. effectiveness of programs); Primary care; Preventive medicine

Repository Status

  • Restricted

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