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Erschienen in: Applied Health Economics and Health Policy 2/2018

01.04.2018 | Original Research Article

A National Budget Impact Analysis of a Specialised Surveillance Programme for Individuals at Very High Risk of Melanoma in Australia

verfasst von: Caroline G. Watts, Sally Wortley, Sarah Norris, Scott W. Menzies, Pascale Guitera, Lisa Askie, Graham J. Mann, Rachael L. Morton, Anne E. Cust

Erschienen in: Applied Health Economics and Health Policy | Ausgabe 2/2018

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Abstract

Background

Specialised surveillance using total body photography and digital dermoscopy to monitor people at very high risk of developing a second or subsequent melanoma has been reported as cost effective.

Objectives

We aimed to estimate the 5-year healthcare budget impact of providing specialised surveillance for people at very high risk of subsequent melanoma from the perspective of the Australian healthcare system.

Methods

A budget impact model was constructed to assess the costs of monitoring and potential savings compared with current routine care based on identification of patients at the time of a melanoma diagnosis. We used data from a published cost-effectiveness analysis of specialised surveillance, and Cancer Registry data, to estimate the patient population and healthcare costs for 2017–2021.

Results

When all eligible patients, estimated at 18% of patients with melanoma diagnosed annually in Australia, received specialised surveillance rather than routine care, the cumulative 5-year cost was estimated at $93.5 million Australian dollars ($AU) ($US 64 million) for specialised surveillance compared with $AU 120.7 million ($US 82.7 million) for routine care, delivering savings of $AU 27.2 million ($US 18.6 million). With a staggered introduction of 60% of eligible patients accessing surveillance in year 1, increasing to 90% in years 4 and 5, the cumulative cost over 5 years was estimated at $AU 98.1 million ($US 67.2 million), amounting to savings of $AU 22.6 million ($US 15.5 million) compared with routine care.

Conclusions

Specialised melanoma surveillance is likely to provide substantial cost savings for the Australian healthcare system.
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Metadaten
Titel
A National Budget Impact Analysis of a Specialised Surveillance Programme for Individuals at Very High Risk of Melanoma in Australia
verfasst von
Caroline G. Watts
Sally Wortley
Sarah Norris
Scott W. Menzies
Pascale Guitera
Lisa Askie
Graham J. Mann
Rachael L. Morton
Anne E. Cust
Publikationsdatum
01.04.2018
Verlag
Springer International Publishing
Erschienen in
Applied Health Economics and Health Policy / Ausgabe 2/2018
Print ISSN: 1175-5652
Elektronische ISSN: 1179-1896
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s40258-017-0368-0

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