Cost-Effectiveness of HIV Screening of Blood Donations in Accra (Ghana)
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International Society for Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes Research (ISPOR)
Abstract
Objectives: Areas with high HIV-incidence rates compared
to the developed world may benefit from additional testing in
blood banks and may show more favorable cost-effectiveness
ratios. We evaluated the cost-effectiveness of adding p24
antigen, mini pool nucleic acid amplification testing (MP NAT), or individual donation NAT (ID-NAT) to the HIV antibody screening at the Korle Bu Teaching Hospital (Accra,
Ghana), where currently only HIV-antibody screening is
undertaken.
Methods: The residual risk of HIV transmission was derived
from blood donations to the blood bank of the Korle Bu
Teaching Hospital in 2004. Remaining life expectancies of
patients receiving blood transfusion were estimated using
the World Health Organization life expectancies. Cost effectiveness ratios for adding the tests to HIV-antibody
screening only were determined using a decision tree model
and a Markov model for HIV.
Results: The prevalence of HIV was estimated at 1.51% in
18,714 donations during 2004. The incremental cost per
disability-adjusted life-year (DALY) averted was US$1237
for p24 antigen, US$3142 for MP-NAT and US$7695 com pared to the next least expensive strategy. HIV-antibody
screening itself was cost-saving compared to no screening at
all, gaining US$73.85 and averting 0.86 DALY per transfused
patient. Up to a willingness-to-pay of US$2736 per DALY
averted, HIV-antibody screening without additional testing
was the most cost-effective strategy. Over a willingness-to pay of US$11,828 per DALY averted, ID-NAT was signifi cantly more cost-effective than the other strategies.
Conclusions: Adding p24 antigen, MP-NAT, or ID-NAT to
the current antibody screening cannot be regarded as a cost effective health-care intervention for Ghana
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Research Article