One-year cost-effectiveness of supervised centre-based exercise training in addition to a post-discharge disease management program for patients recently hospitalized with acute heart failure: The EJECTION-HF study

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Author(s)
Maru, Shoko
Mudge, Alison M
Suna, Jessica M
Scuffham, Paul A
Year published
2019
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Background: Combining supervised exercise training (ET) and disease management program (DMP) may benefit people with heart failure (HF) but will require additional resources. Objectives: To assess the 1-year cost-effectiveness of a 24-week ET program added to a post-discharge DMP in patients recently hospitalized with HF. Methods: Using randomized controlled trial data, within-trial cost-utility analyses were undertaken in the overall population (n = 278), patients aged <70 (n = 180), and those aged ≥70 (n = 98). Incremental net monetary benefits (INMB) were calculated based on quality-adjusted life-years (QALY) and healthcare ...
View more >Background: Combining supervised exercise training (ET) and disease management program (DMP) may benefit people with heart failure (HF) but will require additional resources. Objectives: To assess the 1-year cost-effectiveness of a 24-week ET program added to a post-discharge DMP in patients recently hospitalized with HF. Methods: Using randomized controlled trial data, within-trial cost-utility analyses were undertaken in the overall population (n = 278), patients aged <70 (n = 180), and those aged ≥70 (n = 98). Incremental net monetary benefits (INMB) were calculated based on quality-adjusted life-years (QALY) and healthcare costs from the perspective of a state health department (Queensland, Australia). Results: At the AU$50,000/QALY threshold, ET showed 29.6% and 1.7% probability of being cost-effective in the overall population (INMB AU$ −1,472) and patients aged ≥70 (INMB AU$ −11,469), respectively. In patients aged <70, ET was potentially cost-effective with 83.6% probability (INMB AU$4,059). Conclusion: Adding ET to DMP was not cost-effective overall or in patients aged ≥70 but was relatively cost-effective in those aged <70.
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View more >Background: Combining supervised exercise training (ET) and disease management program (DMP) may benefit people with heart failure (HF) but will require additional resources. Objectives: To assess the 1-year cost-effectiveness of a 24-week ET program added to a post-discharge DMP in patients recently hospitalized with HF. Methods: Using randomized controlled trial data, within-trial cost-utility analyses were undertaken in the overall population (n = 278), patients aged <70 (n = 180), and those aged ≥70 (n = 98). Incremental net monetary benefits (INMB) were calculated based on quality-adjusted life-years (QALY) and healthcare costs from the perspective of a state health department (Queensland, Australia). Results: At the AU$50,000/QALY threshold, ET showed 29.6% and 1.7% probability of being cost-effective in the overall population (INMB AU$ −1,472) and patients aged ≥70 (INMB AU$ −11,469), respectively. In patients aged <70, ET was potentially cost-effective with 83.6% probability (INMB AU$4,059). Conclusion: Adding ET to DMP was not cost-effective overall or in patients aged ≥70 but was relatively cost-effective in those aged <70.
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Journal Title
Heart and Lung
Copyright Statement
© 2019 Elsevier. Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International Licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) which permits unrestricted, non-commercial use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, providing that the work is properly cited.
Subject
Cardiovascular medicine and haematology
Nursing