Economic evaluation of antiviral treatment for chronic hepatits B: a systematic review

Authors

  • Lely Solari UNAGESP (Unidad de Análisis y Generación de Evidencias en Salud Pública) Centro Nacional de Salud Pública, Instituto Nacional de Salud. Lima, Perú. Médico infectóloga.
  • Gisely Hijar UNAGESP (Unidad de Análisis y Generación de Evidencias en Salud Pública) Centro Nacional de Salud Pública, Instituto Nacional de Salud. Lima, Perú. Bióloga.
  • Renzo Zavala UNAGESP (Unidad de Análisis y Generación de Evidencias en Salud Pública) Centro Nacional de Salud Pública, Instituto Nacional de Salud. Lima, Perú. Médico.
  • Juan Manuel Ureta UNAGESP (Unidad de Análisis y Generación de Evidencias en Salud Pública) Centro Nacional de Salud Pública, Instituto Nacional de Salud. Lima, Perú. Médico epidemiólogo.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17843/rpmesp.2010.271.1447

Keywords:

Análisis costo-beneficio, Economía en Atención de Salud y Organizaciones, Hepatitis B, Agentes Antivirales, Revisión de la Utilización de Drogas

Abstract

Objective. To revise the available evidence on the cost-effectiveness of antiviral regimens for treatment of chronic hepatitis B. Material and methods. We performed a systematic revision on MEDLINE, LILACS NICE and COCHRANE databases, searching for economic evaluations of antiviral regimens for treatment of chronic hepatitis B. We included original studies, systematic revisions and management guidelines including information on the cost-effectiveness of this treatment. We registered the characteristics and results of the retrieved documents. Results. We obtained 29 original papers, 4 revision articles and 4 management guidelines. Most of these publications have been done in the last 5 years. There was conflict of interest in 73% of original articles, due to authors working for the pharmaceutical industry. 93% of articles that evaluate the cost-effectiveness of giving treatment for chronic hepatitis B against management of its complications find that it is indeed cost-effective to give antiviral treatment. 3/6 studies that evaluate lamivudine against other drugs find it as a dominant strategy, 3/5 find entecavir as the dominant strategy, 1/1 find tenofovir dominant, ¼ find conventional interferon as dominant and none of them find adefovir or pegylated interferon as dominant strategies. Conclusions. We consider that the available evidence suggests that to give antiviral treatment for chronic hepatitis B is a cost-effective intervention for many health systems, including ours. It has varying indexes of cost-effectiveness according to the evaluated regimens. Ideally , we should perform local economic evaluations in this issue.

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Published

2010-03-31

Issue

Section

Review

How to Cite

1.
Solari L, Hijar G, Zavala R, Ureta JM. Economic evaluation of antiviral treatment for chronic hepatits B: a systematic review. Rev Peru Med Exp Salud Publica [Internet]. 2010 Mar. 31 [cited 2024 Nov. 22];27(1). Available from: https://rpmesp.ins.gob.pe/index.php/rpmesp/article/view/1447