Screen-and-Treat Strategies for Albuminuria to Prevent Cardiovascular and Renal Disease:Cost-Effectiveness of Nationwide and Targeted Interventions Based on Analysis of Cohort Data From the Netherlands

Background: Albuminuria is a marker for renal and cardiovascular (CV) risk, allowing early diagnosis of subjects with elevated renal and CV risk. Objective: This study aimed to estimate the cost-effectiveness and budget impact of various population-based screen-and-treat scenarios for elevated albuminuria levels (ie, microalbuminuria) in the Netherlands. Methods: A multistate transition Markov model was developed to simulate the natural course of albuminuria-based disease progression to dialysis and occurrence of CV events. Several population-based strategies directed at screening for elevated... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Boersma, Cornelis
Gansevoort, Ron T.
Pechlivanoglou, Petros
Visser, Sipke T.
van Toly, Flip F. J.
de Jong-van den Berg, Lolkje T. W.
de Jong, Paul E.
Postma, Maarten J.
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2010
Reihe/Periodikum: Boersma , C , Gansevoort , R T , Pechlivanoglou , P , Visser , S T , van Toly , F F J , de Jong-van den Berg , L T W , de Jong , P E , Postma , M J & Prevention Renal Vasc ENd-Stage Di 2010 , ' Screen-and-Treat Strategies for Albuminuria to Prevent Cardiovascular and Renal Disease : Cost-Effectiveness of Nationwide and Targeted Interventions Based on Analysis of Cohort Data From the Netherlands ' , Clinical Therapeutics , vol. 32 , no. 6 , pp. 1103-1121 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clinthera.2010.06.013
Schlagwörter: cost-effectiveness / screening / microalbuminuria / cardiovascular disease / renal disease / CHRONIC KIDNEY-DISEASE / GENERAL-POPULATION / TYPE-2 DIABETES/ / RISK-FACTORS / EXCRETION / NEPHROPATHY / PREDICTS / EVENTS / HYPERTENSION
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-29191440
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://hdl.handle.net/11370/76ba1d81-3d39-4ad3-b4de-cb84a21ffdb5

Background: Albuminuria is a marker for renal and cardiovascular (CV) risk, allowing early diagnosis of subjects with elevated renal and CV risk. Objective: This study aimed to estimate the cost-effectiveness and budget impact of various population-based screen-and-treat scenarios for elevated albuminuria levels (ie, microalbuminuria) in the Netherlands. Methods: A multistate transition Markov model was developed to simulate the natural course of albuminuria-based disease progression to dialysis and occurrence of CV events. Several population-based strategies directed at screening for elevated albuminuria were evaluated. These strategies depended on urinary albumin concentration (UAC), urinary albumin excretion (UAE), and age. Transition probabilities were derived from the observational community-based Prevention of Renal and Vascular End Stage Disease (PREVEND) cohort study. Health care costs (in year-2008 euros) and life-years gained were calculated over an 8-year period. In the base-case analysis, we analyzed screening for and treatment of microalbuminuria. Screening for microalbuminuria involved prescreening for UAC >= 20 mg/L, followed by a confirmation test for UAE >= 30 mg/d. Other options based on combinations of albuminuria for UAC prescreening (no prescreening, and >= 10, >= 20, >= 100, and >= 200 mg/L) and UAE confirmation test (>= 15, >= 30, and 300 mg/d) for treatment were investigated in scenario analyses. Furthermore, these various strategies based on UAC and UAE values were analyzed in different subgroups based on age (all ages, aged >= 50 years, and aged >= 60 years). Results: The PREVEND study included 8592 Dutch residents aged 28 to 75 years at the time of initial screening. Among a hypothetical cohort of 1000 subjects identified and treated in the base-case analysis, it was estimated (based on PREVEND follow-up data) that, in the screening/treatment and no-screening scenarios, 76 versus 124 CV events occurred, 16 versus 27 CV deaths, and 3 versus 5 dialysis ...