AI Article Synopsis

  • Antimicrobial prophylaxis can help children with vesicoureteral reflux (VUR) reduce urinary tract infection recurrences, but requires long-term daily medication.
  • A cost-utility model assessed the economic value of different prophylaxis strategies for children under 6 years old with a first UTI and VUR, measuring costs against quality-adjusted life years (QALYs).
  • Prophylaxis for Grade IV VUR is cost-effective at $37,903 per QALY gained, while treating Grades III and IV VUR is more expensive at $302,024 per QALY, and treating all grades of VUR is even costlier at $339,740 per QALY.

Article Abstract

Antimicrobial prophylaxis for children with vesicoureteral reflux (VUR) reduces recurrences of urinary tract infection (UTI) but requires daily antimicrobials for extended periods. We used a cost-utility model to evaluate whether the benefits of antimicrobial prophylaxis outweigh its risks and, if so, to investigate whether the benefits and risks vary according to grade of VUR. We compared the cost per quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) gained in four treatment strategies in children aged <6 years diagnosed with VUR after a first UTI, considering these treatment strategies: (1) prophylaxis for all children with VUR, (2) prophylaxis for children with Grade III or Grade IV VUR, (3) prophylaxis for children with Grade IV VUR, and (4) no prophylaxis. Costs and effectiveness were estimated over the patient's lifetime. We used $100,000/QALY gained as the threshold for considering a treatment strategy cost effective. Based on current data and plausible ranges to account for data uncertainty, prophylaxis of children with Grades IV VUR costs $37,903 per QALY gained. Treating children with Grade III and IV VUR costs an additional $302,024 per QALY gained. Treating children with all grades of VUR costs an additional $339,740 per QALY gained. Treating children with Grades I, II, and III VUR with long-term antimicrobial prophylaxis costs substantially more than interventions typically considered economically reasonable. Prophylaxis in children with Grade IV VUR is cost effective.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6965145PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fped.2019.00530DOI Listing

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