Estimating the Health and Economic Impact of Improved Management in Prevalent Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Populations in England, Germany, Canada, and Japan: A Modelling Study

Elisabeth J. Adams*, Alexander van Doornewaard, Yixuan Ma, Nurilign Ahmed, Man Ki Cheng, Henrik Watz, Masakazu Ichinose, Tom Wilkinson, Mohit Bhutani, Christopher J. Licskai, Katy M.E. Turner

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Introduction: COPD is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality globally. Management is complex and costly. Although international quality standards for diagnosis and management exist, opportunities remain to improve outcomes, especially in reducing avoidable hospitalisations. Objective: To estimate the potential health and economic impact of improved adherence to guideline-recommended care for prevalent, on-treatment COPD populations in four high-income settings. Methods: A disease simulation model was developed to evaluate the impact of theoretical improvements to COPD management, comparing outcomes for usual care and policy scenarios for interventions that reduce avoidable hospitalisations: 1) increased attendance (50% vs 31–38%) of early follow-up review after severe exacerbation hospitalisation; 2) increased access (30% vs 5–10%) to an integrated disease management (IDM) programme that provides guideline adherent care. Results: For cohorts of 100,000 patients, Policy 1 yielded additional life years (England: 523; Germany: 759; Canada: 1316; Japan: 512) and lifetime cost savings (-£2.89 million;-€6.58 million;-$40.08 million;-¥735.58 million). For Policy 2, additional life years (2299; 3619; 3656) and higher lifetime total costs (£38.15 million; €35.58 million; ¥1091.53 million) were estimated in England, Germany and Japan, and additional life years (4299) and cost savings (-$20.52 million) in Canada. Scenarios found that the cost impact depended on the modelled intervention effect size. Conclusion: Interventions that reduce avoidable hospitalisations are estimated to improve survival and may generate cost savings. This study provides evidence on the theoretical impact of policies to improve COPD care and highlights priority areas for further research to support evidence-based policy decisions.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2127-2146
Number of pages20
JournalInternational Journal of COPD
Volume18
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2023
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Adams et al.

Keywords

  • economic evaluation
  • exacerbations
  • health intervention
  • integrated care
  • re-admission

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