Volume 39, Issue 1 pp. 22-31
Original Article

Conservative management, surgery and radiosurgery for treatment of vestibular schwannomas: a model-based approach to cost-effectiveness

C. Gait

C. Gait

Health Economics Unit, School of Health and Population Sciences, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK

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E.J. Frew

Corresponding Author

E.J. Frew

Health Economics Unit, School of Health and Population Sciences, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK

Correspondence: E.J. Frew, Health Economics Unit, School of Health and Population Sciences, University of Birmingham, Birmingham B15 2TT, UK. Tel.: +44 (0)121 414 3199; fax: +44 (0)121 414 8969;e-mail: [email protected]Search for more papers by this author
T.P.C. Martin

T.P.C. Martin

ENT Department, Worcester Royal Hospital, Worcester, UK

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S. Jowett

S. Jowett

Health Economics Unit, School of Health and Population Sciences, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK

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R. Irving

R. Irving

Queen Elizabeth Skull Base Unit, Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Birmingham, West Midlands, UK

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First published: 06 December 2013
Citations: 24

Abstract

Objective

To undertake a cost-effectiveness analysis comparing conservative management, surgery and radiosurgery for treating small-to-medium (1–20 mm)-sized vestibular schwannomas.

Design

Model-based economic evaluation using individual-level data from a Birmingham-based longitudinal patient database and from published sources. Both a decision tree and state-transition (Markov) model were developed, from an National Health Service (NHS) perspective. Sensitivity analyses were also carried out.

Setting

Secondary care treatment for patients with small-to-medium-sized vestibular schwannomas.

Participants

Three hypothetical cohorts of adult patients receiving conservative management, radiosurgery or surgery treatment, aged 58 years as starting age within model.

Main outcome measures

Cost-effectiveness based on cost per quality-adjusted life year (QALY).

Results

Conservative management is the preferred strategy for the treatment of small-to-medium-sized vestibular schwannomas. Conservative management is both cheaper (−£722 and −£2764) and more effective (0.136 and 0.554 quality-adjusted life years) than both radiosurgery and surgery, respectively. A conservative strategy can therefore be considered as highly cost-effective. This result is sensitive to the assumed quality-of-life parameters in the model. Sensitivity analysis suggests that the probability of a conservative strategy being the most cost-effective approach compared with surgery and radiosurgery at a willingness to pay of £20 000/quality-adjusted life year gained is 80% and 55%, respectively.

Conclusions

A conservative approach is the preferred strategy for treatment of small-to-medium vestibular schwannomas. This result is sensitive to quality-of-life values used in the analysis. More research is required to assess the impact of treatment upon patients’ health-related quality of life over time.

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