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Cost-effectiveness of C-reactive protein point of care testing for safely reducing antibiotic consumption for acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease as part of the multicentre, parallel-arm, open, individually randomised, controlled PACE trial

Cost-effectiveness of C-reactive protein point of care testing for safely reducing antibiotic consumption for acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease as part of the multicentre, parallel-arm, open, individually randomised, controlled PACE trial
Cost-effectiveness of C-reactive protein point of care testing for safely reducing antibiotic consumption for acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease as part of the multicentre, parallel-arm, open, individually randomised, controlled PACE trial

Objectives: many patients presenting with acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (AECOPD) in primary care do not benefit from antibiotics. Excessive use wastes resources, promotes antimicrobial resistance and can harm patients.

Design: we conducted a within-trial economic evaluation, using a UK National Health Service perspective, as part of the multicentre, parallel-arm, open, individually randomised, controlled PACE trial.

Setting: participating general practices in primary care.

Participants: PACE included 324 and 325 consenting participants presenting with AECOPD in the usual-care and CRP-guided groups, respectively.

Intervention: we assessed the cost-effectiveness (CE) of a C-reactive protein point-of-care-test (CRP-POCT) in addition to usual clinical assessment to guide antibiotic prescribing for AECOPD in primary care.

Primary and secondary outcome measures: a cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) of incremental cost per 1% antibiotic consumption reduction at 4 weeks and a cost-utility analysis (CUA) at 6 months were performed, based on a modified intention-to-treat population. Sensitivity analyses assessed the impact of uncertainty on the results. CE acceptability curves represent the probability of CRP-POCT being cost-effective at different willingness-to-pay (WTP) thresholds.

Results: both groups had similar clinical outcomes, but a 20% absolute reduction in antibiotic consumption was observed in the CRP-guided group. CRP-POCT costs of £11.31 per test were largely offset by savings in healthcare resource use related to COPD. The mean incremental CE ratios of CRP-POCT were £120 per 1% absolute reduction in antibiotic consumption at 4 weeks and £1054 per quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) gained at 6 months. Sensitivity analysis showed that the CEA results were most affected by changes in healthcare costs, while CUA was sensitive due to marginal differences in costs and outcomes. There is a 73% probability of CRP-POCT being cost-effective at WTP ≤£20 000 per QALY gained.

Conclusion: CRP-POCT is a cost-effective intervention for safely reducing antibiotic consumption in patients with AECOPD.

Trial registration number: ISRCTN24346473.

Aged, Anti-Bacterial Agents/economics, C-Reactive Protein/analysis, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Disease Progression, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Point-of-Care Testing/economics, Primary Health Care/economics, Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive/drug therapy, Quality-Adjusted Life Years, United Kingdom, primary health care, patient reported outcome measures, quality of life, health economics, pulmonary disease, chronic obstructive
2044-6055
e084144
Sewell, Bernadette
d753e76b-592d-4abe-a4f3-c0f8aa8b41ce
Francis, Nick
9b610883-605c-4fee-871d-defaa86ccf8e
Harris, Shaun
13b8cd78-a933-4e31-8ed0-b3f487e774fd
Gillespie, David
a1389d8b-011c-408e-8064-2ce4ccf3312a
Bates, Janine
290a69e6-4f81-4dbe-b270-30e4155ca576
White, Patrick
aa8d0bb0-0a13-4c57-8b3b-e8fa19b46b93
Alam, Mohammed Fasihul
209b7bf8-434f-4b2c-9815-724131f6fbe4
Hood, Kerenza
62906d76-4931-4b12-9a64-0c867c7b84c1
Butler, Christopher C
8bf4cace-c34a-4b65-838f-29c2be91e434
Fitzsimmons, Deborah
4e282651-162f-48f0-bbf7-190c265279f2
Sewell, Bernadette
d753e76b-592d-4abe-a4f3-c0f8aa8b41ce
Francis, Nick
9b610883-605c-4fee-871d-defaa86ccf8e
Harris, Shaun
13b8cd78-a933-4e31-8ed0-b3f487e774fd
Gillespie, David
a1389d8b-011c-408e-8064-2ce4ccf3312a
Bates, Janine
290a69e6-4f81-4dbe-b270-30e4155ca576
White, Patrick
aa8d0bb0-0a13-4c57-8b3b-e8fa19b46b93
Alam, Mohammed Fasihul
209b7bf8-434f-4b2c-9815-724131f6fbe4
Hood, Kerenza
62906d76-4931-4b12-9a64-0c867c7b84c1
Butler, Christopher C
8bf4cace-c34a-4b65-838f-29c2be91e434
Fitzsimmons, Deborah
4e282651-162f-48f0-bbf7-190c265279f2

Sewell, Bernadette, Francis, Nick, Harris, Shaun, Gillespie, David, Bates, Janine, White, Patrick, Alam, Mohammed Fasihul, Hood, Kerenza, Butler, Christopher C and Fitzsimmons, Deborah (2024) Cost-effectiveness of C-reactive protein point of care testing for safely reducing antibiotic consumption for acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease as part of the multicentre, parallel-arm, open, individually randomised, controlled PACE trial. BMJ Open, 14 (11), e084144. (doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2024-084144).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objectives: many patients presenting with acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (AECOPD) in primary care do not benefit from antibiotics. Excessive use wastes resources, promotes antimicrobial resistance and can harm patients.

Design: we conducted a within-trial economic evaluation, using a UK National Health Service perspective, as part of the multicentre, parallel-arm, open, individually randomised, controlled PACE trial.

Setting: participating general practices in primary care.

Participants: PACE included 324 and 325 consenting participants presenting with AECOPD in the usual-care and CRP-guided groups, respectively.

Intervention: we assessed the cost-effectiveness (CE) of a C-reactive protein point-of-care-test (CRP-POCT) in addition to usual clinical assessment to guide antibiotic prescribing for AECOPD in primary care.

Primary and secondary outcome measures: a cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) of incremental cost per 1% antibiotic consumption reduction at 4 weeks and a cost-utility analysis (CUA) at 6 months were performed, based on a modified intention-to-treat population. Sensitivity analyses assessed the impact of uncertainty on the results. CE acceptability curves represent the probability of CRP-POCT being cost-effective at different willingness-to-pay (WTP) thresholds.

Results: both groups had similar clinical outcomes, but a 20% absolute reduction in antibiotic consumption was observed in the CRP-guided group. CRP-POCT costs of £11.31 per test were largely offset by savings in healthcare resource use related to COPD. The mean incremental CE ratios of CRP-POCT were £120 per 1% absolute reduction in antibiotic consumption at 4 weeks and £1054 per quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) gained at 6 months. Sensitivity analysis showed that the CEA results were most affected by changes in healthcare costs, while CUA was sensitive due to marginal differences in costs and outcomes. There is a 73% probability of CRP-POCT being cost-effective at WTP ≤£20 000 per QALY gained.

Conclusion: CRP-POCT is a cost-effective intervention for safely reducing antibiotic consumption in patients with AECOPD.

Trial registration number: ISRCTN24346473.

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Accepted/In Press date: 28 October 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 27 November 2024
Published date: 27 November 2024
Keywords: Aged, Anti-Bacterial Agents/economics, C-Reactive Protein/analysis, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Disease Progression, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Point-of-Care Testing/economics, Primary Health Care/economics, Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive/drug therapy, Quality-Adjusted Life Years, United Kingdom, primary health care, patient reported outcome measures, quality of life, health economics, pulmonary disease, chronic obstructive

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 496900
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496900
ISSN: 2044-6055
PURE UUID: fec6c282-cb08-41cb-93e1-118b630dfd11
ORCID for Nick Francis: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8939-7312

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Date deposited: 08 Jan 2025 12:38
Last modified: 10 Jan 2025 03:06

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Contributors

Author: Bernadette Sewell
Author: Nick Francis ORCID iD
Author: Shaun Harris
Author: David Gillespie
Author: Janine Bates
Author: Patrick White
Author: Mohammed Fasihul Alam
Author: Kerenza Hood
Author: Christopher C Butler
Author: Deborah Fitzsimmons

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