Health state utilities associated with invasive pneumococcal disease, pneumonia, and recurrent acute otitis media in young children

  • Louis S. Matza*
  • , Timothy A. Howell
  • , Bianca Chun
  • , Lucinda Hetherington
  • , Meghan White
  • , Thomas Weiss
  • , Min Huang
  • , Donna Rowen
  • , Tina Tan
  • , Kristen Feemster
  • , Bayad Nozad
  • , Matthew S. Kelly
  • , Alejandro Hoberman
  • , Salini Mohanty
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Purpose: Cost-utility analyses examining the value of new vaccines for pneumococcal disease will require health state utilities as inputs. Existing utilities for pneumococcal infections in young children are limited. The purpose of this study was to estimate health state utilities associated with pneumococcal infections in young children. Methods: Six health state vignettes depicting infections due to Streptococcus pneumoniae were drafted based on published literature and clinician interviews. To address methodological challenges in estimating utilities for temporary infections in children 0–5 years of age, several time trade-off approaches were explored in a pilot study (N = 28 participants). In the subsequent utility elicitation study conducted in the UK, health states were valued using the best performing method from the pilot (10-year time horizon, with infections repeated annually) with adult general population respondents imagining a child 2–5 years of age. Results: A total of 208 participants completed interviews (51.9% female; mean [SD] age = 41.0 [14.9] years). Mean (SD) utilities were 0.902 (0.092) for pneumonia requiring hospitalization, 0.901 (0.087) for bacteremia, 0.894 (0.103) for recurrent acute otitis media (AOM), 0.882 (0.107) for recurrent AOM treated with pressure equalization tubes, 0.878 (0.109) for bacteremic pneumonia, and 0.809 (0.145) for meningitis. Conclusion: Lower health state utilities were associated with health states that had longer treatment periods, required more invasive treatment, and described more severe infections. Utilities from this study can be used in models examining cost-effectiveness of pneumococcal vaccines. These results have methodological implications for future research estimating utilities associated with temporary pediatric health conditions.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)809-821
Number of pages13
JournalQuality of Life Research
Volume34
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Mar 2025
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© Merck & Co., Inc., Rahway, NJ, USA and its affiliates & Imperial College London & Louis S. Matza, Timothy A. Howell, Lucinda Hetherington, Donna Rowen, Tina Tan, Matthew S. Kelly, Alejandro Hoberman 2025.

Keywords

  • Children
  • Cost-effectiveness
  • Health state utilities
  • Pediatric
  • Pneumococcal infections
  • Streptococcus pneumoniae
  • Time trade-off

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