Cost Effectiveness of Influenza Vaccine Choices in Children Aged 2-8 Years in the US
Authored by Shawn T Brown, Richard K Zimmerman, Kenneth J Smith, Jonathan M Raviotta, Jay V DePasse, Eunha Shim, Mary Patricia Nowalk
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.amepre.2015.12.010
Sponsors:
United States National Institutes of Health (NIH)
Platforms:
Framework for Reconstructing Epidemiological Dynamics (FRED)
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Introduction: Prior evidence found live attenuated influenza vaccine
(LAIV) more effective than inactivated influenza vaccine (IIV) in
children aged 2-8 years, leading CDC in 2014 to prefer LAIV use in this
group. However, since 2013, LAIV has not proven superior, leading CDC in
2015 to rescind their LAIV preference statement. Here, the cost
effectiveness of preferred LAIV use compared with IIV in children aged
2-8 years is estimated.
Methods: A Markov model estimated vaccination strategy cost
effectiveness in terms of cost per quality-adjusted life-year gained.
Base case assumptions were equal vaccine uptake; IIV use when LAIV was
not indicated (in 11.7\% of the cohort); and no indirect vaccination
effects. Sensitivity analyses included estimates of indirect effects
from both equation- and agent-based models. Analyses were performed in
2014-2015.
Results: Using prior effectiveness data in children aged 2-8 years
(LAIV=83\%, IIV=64\%), preferred LAIV use was less costly and more
effective than IIV (dominant), with results sensitive only to LAIV and
IIV effectiveness variation. Using 2014-2015 U.S. effectiveness data
(LAIV=0\%, IIV=15\%), IIV was dominant. In two-way sensitivity analyses, LAIV use was cost saving over the entire range of IIV effectiveness
(0\%-81\%) when absolute LAIV effectiveness was >7.1\% higher than IIV, but never cost saving when absolute LAIV effectiveness was <3.5\% higher
than IIV.
Conclusions: Results support CDC's decision to no longer prefer LAIV use
and provide guidance on effectiveness differences between influenza
vaccines that might lead to preferential LAIV recommendation for
children aged 2-8 years. (C) 2016 American Journal of Preventive
Medicine
Tags
Seasonal influenza
United-states
Life
Young-children
Hospitalizations
Trivalent