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https://www.arca.fiocruz.br/handle/icict/35219
Tipo de documento
ArtigoDireito Autoral
Acesso aberto
Data de embargo
2020-02-29
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COST-EFFECTIVENESS OF TUBERCULOSIS SCREENING AND ISONIAZID TREATMENT IN THE TB/HIV IN RIO (THRIO) STUDY
Autor(es)
Afiliação
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. Department of Population Family and Reproductive Health. Baltimore, MD, USA.
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. Department of Population Family and Reproductive Health. Baltimore, MD, USA.
Johns Hopkins School of Public Health. Department of Epidemiology. Baltimore, MD, USA.
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. Department of International Health. Baltimore, MD, USA / Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Center for Tuberculosis Research. Department of Medicine. Baltimore, MD, USA.
Municipal Health Secretariat. Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil / Fundação Oswaldo Cruz. Presdiência. Programa de Computação Científica. Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brasil.
Municipal Health Secretariat. Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil.
Fundação Oswaldo Cruz. Presidência. Programa de Computação Científica. Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brasil.
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. Department of International Health. Baltimore, MD, USA / Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Center for Tuberculosis Research. Department of Medicine. Baltimore, MD, USA.
Johns Hopkins School of Public Health. Department of Epidemiology. Baltimore, MD, USA / Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. Department of International Health. Baltimore, MD, USA / Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Center for Tuberculosis Research. Department of Medicine. Baltimore, MD, USA / Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Center for Tuberculosis Research. Department of Medicine. Baltimore, MD, USA.
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Center for Tuberculosis Research. Department of Medicine. Baltimore, MD, USA / Federal University of Rio de Janeiro. Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil.
Johns Hopkins School of Public Health. Department of Epidemiology. Baltimore, MD, USA / Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. Department of International Health. Baltimore, MD, USA / Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Center for Tuberculosis Research. Department of Medicine. Baltimore, MD, USA / Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Center for Tuberculosis Research. Department of Medicine. Baltimore, MD, USA.
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. Department of Population Family and Reproductive Health. Baltimore, MD, USA.
Johns Hopkins School of Public Health. Department of Epidemiology. Baltimore, MD, USA.
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. Department of International Health. Baltimore, MD, USA / Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Center for Tuberculosis Research. Department of Medicine. Baltimore, MD, USA.
Municipal Health Secretariat. Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil / Fundação Oswaldo Cruz. Presdiência. Programa de Computação Científica. Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brasil.
Municipal Health Secretariat. Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil.
Fundação Oswaldo Cruz. Presidência. Programa de Computação Científica. Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brasil.
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. Department of International Health. Baltimore, MD, USA / Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Center for Tuberculosis Research. Department of Medicine. Baltimore, MD, USA.
Johns Hopkins School of Public Health. Department of Epidemiology. Baltimore, MD, USA / Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. Department of International Health. Baltimore, MD, USA / Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Center for Tuberculosis Research. Department of Medicine. Baltimore, MD, USA / Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Center for Tuberculosis Research. Department of Medicine. Baltimore, MD, USA.
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Center for Tuberculosis Research. Department of Medicine. Baltimore, MD, USA / Federal University of Rio de Janeiro. Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil.
Johns Hopkins School of Public Health. Department of Epidemiology. Baltimore, MD, USA / Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. Department of International Health. Baltimore, MD, USA / Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Center for Tuberculosis Research. Department of Medicine. Baltimore, MD, USA / Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Center for Tuberculosis Research. Department of Medicine. Baltimore, MD, USA.
Resumo
OBJECTIVE: To estimate the incremental cost-effectiveness of tuberculosis (TB) screening and isoniazid
preventive therapy (IPT) among human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infected adults in Rio de Janeiro,
Brazil. DESIGN: We used decision analysis, populated by data from a cluster-randomized trial, to project the costs (in 2010 USD) and effectiveness (in disability-adjusted life years [DALYs] averted) of training health care workers to implement the tuberculin skin test (TST), followed by IPT for TST-positive patients with no evidence of active TB. This intervention was compared to a baseline of usual care. We used time horizons of 1 year for the intervention and 20 years for disease outcomes, with all future DALYs and medical costs discounted at 3% per year. RESULTS: Providing this intervention to 100 people would avert 1.14 discounted DALYs (1.57 undiscounted DALYs). The median estimated incremental cost-effectiveness ratio was $2273 (IQR $1779–$3135) per DALY averted, less than Brazil’s 2010 per capita gross domestic product (GDP) of $11 700. Results were most sensitive to the cost of providing the training. CONCLUSION: Training health care workers to screen HIV-infected adults with TST and provide IPT to those with latent tuberculous infection can be considered cost-effective relative to the Brazilian GDP per capita.
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