AI Article Synopsis

  • * Patients were randomly assigned to either the intervention group (access to Oncokompas) or the control group (delay in access), with costs and health outcomes measured over three months.
  • * Results indicated that Oncokompas had non-significantly lower costs but also appeared slightly less effective in improving quality-adjusted life years (QALYs), suggesting the need for further research on the economic value of eHealth in palliative care.

Article Abstract

Evidence on the cost-effectiveness of eHealth in palliative care is scarce. Oncokompas, a fully automated behavioral intervention technology, aims to support self-management in cancer patients. This study aimed to assess the cost-utility of the eHealth application Oncokompas among incurably ill cancer patients, compared to care as usual. In this randomized controlled trial, patients were randomized into the intervention group (access to Oncokompas) or the waiting-list control group (access after three months). Healthcare costs, productivity losses, and health status were measured at baseline and three months. Intervention costs were also taken into account. Non-parametric bootstrapping with 5000 replications was used to obtain 95% confidence intervals around the incremental costs and quality-adjusted life years (QALYs). A probabilistic approach was used because of the skewness of cost data. Altogether, 138 patients completed the baseline questionnaire and were randomly assigned to the intervention group (69) or the control group (69). In the base case analysis, mean total costs and mean total effects were non-significantly lower in the intervention group (-€806 and -0.01 QALYs). The probability that the intervention was more effective and less costly was 4%, whereas the probability of being less effective and less costly was 74%. Among patients with incurable cancer, Oncokompas does not impact incremental costs and seems slightly less effective in terms of QALYs, compared to care as usual. Future research on the costs of eHealth in palliative cancer care is warranted to assess the generalizability of the findings of this study.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9497666PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/curroncol29090486DOI Listing

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