Cost-effectiveness of competing diagnostic-therapeutic strategies for visceral leishmaniasis

M Boelaert, L Lynen, P Desjeux, P Van der Stuyft

Research output: Contribution to journalA1: Web of Science-articlepeer-review

Abstract

Reported are the results of a formal decision analysis which facilitated the choice of the most appropriate test-treatment strategy for visceral leishmaniasis in areas where the disease is endemic. The following strategies were compared: treatment of all suspects (strategy A); testing by means of parasitological investigation followed by treatment of positives (strategy B); two-step testing by means of the direct agglutination test (DAT) followed by treatment of patients with high titres as well as those with parasitologically confirmed borderline titres (strategy C); and DAT followed by treatment of positives (strategy D).

The results for each strategy were expressed as costs in US$ per death averted. The effectiveness of strategies C and D was close to that of strategy A and far better than that of strategy B. The cost-effectiveness ratio for strategies C and D (US$ 465 per death averted) was not substantially higher than that of testing by means of parasitological investigation followed by treatment of positives (strategy B), which was the most cost-effective strategy at US$448 per death averted. At current prices of antimonial drugs, the cost of lest-treatment strategies depends more on the cost of treatment than on that of testing. The use of a sensitive serological test such as the DAT is recommended as the basis of test-treatment strategies for visceral leishmaniasis in areas where the disease is endemic.
Original languageEnglish
JournalBulletin of the World Health Organization
Volume77
Issue number8
Pages (from-to)667-674
Number of pages8
ISSN0042-9686
Publication statusPublished - 1999

Keywords

  • B780-tropical-medicine
  • Protozoal diseases
  • Leishmaniasis
  • Visceral
  • Laboratory diagnosis
  • Agglutination tests
  • DAT
  • Drug therapy
  • Cost-effectiveness

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