Screening, isolation, and decolonisation strategies in the control of meticillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus in intensive care units: Cost effectiveness evaluation

Objective: To assess the cost effectiveness of screening, isolation, and decolonisation strategies in the control of meticillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) in intensive care units. Design: Economic evaluation based on a dynamic transmission model. Setting: England and Wales. Population: T...

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Main Authors: Julie V. Robotham, Nicholas Graves, Barry D. Cookson, Adrian G. Barnett, Jennie A. Wilson, Jonathan D. Edgeworth, Rahul Batra, Brian H. Cuthbertson, Ben S. Cooper
Other Authors: Health Protection Agency
Format: Article
Published: 2018
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Online Access:https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/12261
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spelling th-mahidol.122612018-05-03T15:24:08Z Screening, isolation, and decolonisation strategies in the control of meticillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus in intensive care units: Cost effectiveness evaluation Julie V. Robotham Nicholas Graves Barry D. Cookson Adrian G. Barnett Jennie A. Wilson Jonathan D. Edgeworth Rahul Batra Brian H. Cuthbertson Ben S. Cooper Health Protection Agency Queensland University of Technology QUT Hammersmith Hospital King's College London Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre Mahidol University Nuffield Department of Clinical Medicine Medicine Objective: To assess the cost effectiveness of screening, isolation, and decolonisation strategies in the control of meticillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) in intensive care units. Design: Economic evaluation based on a dynamic transmission model. Setting: England and Wales. Population: Theoretical population of patients on an intensive care unit. Main outcome measures: Infections, deaths, costs, quality adjusted life years (QALYs), incremental cost effectiveness ratios for alternative strategies, and net monetary benefits. Results: All decolonisation strategies improved health outcomes and reduced costs. Although universal decolonisation (regardless of MRSA status) was the most cost effective in the short term, strategies using screening to target MRSA carriers may be preferred owing to the reduced risk of selecting for resistance. Among such targeted strategies, universal admission and weekly screening with polymerase chain reaction coupled with decolonisation using nasal mupirocin was the most cost effective. This finding was robust to the size of intensive care units, prevalence of MRSA on admission, proportion of patients classified as high risk, and precise value of willingness to pay for health benefits. All strategies using isolation but not decolonisation improved health outcomes but costs were increased. When the prevalence of MRSA on admission to the intensive care unit was 5% and the willingness to pay per QALY gained was between £20 000 (€23 000; $32 000) and £30 000, the best such strategy was to isolate only those patients at high risk of carrying MRSA (either pre-emptively or after identification by admission and weekly screening for MRSA using chromogenic agar). Universal admission and weekly screening using polymerase chain reaction based detection of MRSA coupled with isolation was unlikely to be cost effective unless prevalence was high (10% of patients colonised with MRSA on admission). Conclusions: MRSA control strategies that use decolonisation are likely to be cost saving in an intensive care unit setting provided resistance is lacking, and combining universal screening using polymerase chain reaction with decolonisation is likely to represent good value for money if untargeted decolonisation is considered unacceptable. In intensivecare units where decolonisation is not implemented, evidence is insufficient to support universal screening for MRSA outside high prevalence settings. 2018-05-03T08:24:08Z 2018-05-03T08:24:08Z 2011-10-15 Article BMJ (Online). Vol.343, No.7827 (2011) 10.1136/bmj.d5694 17561833 09598146 2-s2.0-84859001819 https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/12261 Mahidol University SCOPUS https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=84859001819&origin=inward
institution Mahidol University
building Mahidol University Library
continent Asia
country Thailand
Thailand
content_provider Mahidol University Library
collection Mahidol University Institutional Repository
topic Medicine
spellingShingle Medicine
Julie V. Robotham
Nicholas Graves
Barry D. Cookson
Adrian G. Barnett
Jennie A. Wilson
Jonathan D. Edgeworth
Rahul Batra
Brian H. Cuthbertson
Ben S. Cooper
Screening, isolation, and decolonisation strategies in the control of meticillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus in intensive care units: Cost effectiveness evaluation
description Objective: To assess the cost effectiveness of screening, isolation, and decolonisation strategies in the control of meticillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) in intensive care units. Design: Economic evaluation based on a dynamic transmission model. Setting: England and Wales. Population: Theoretical population of patients on an intensive care unit. Main outcome measures: Infections, deaths, costs, quality adjusted life years (QALYs), incremental cost effectiveness ratios for alternative strategies, and net monetary benefits. Results: All decolonisation strategies improved health outcomes and reduced costs. Although universal decolonisation (regardless of MRSA status) was the most cost effective in the short term, strategies using screening to target MRSA carriers may be preferred owing to the reduced risk of selecting for resistance. Among such targeted strategies, universal admission and weekly screening with polymerase chain reaction coupled with decolonisation using nasal mupirocin was the most cost effective. This finding was robust to the size of intensive care units, prevalence of MRSA on admission, proportion of patients classified as high risk, and precise value of willingness to pay for health benefits. All strategies using isolation but not decolonisation improved health outcomes but costs were increased. When the prevalence of MRSA on admission to the intensive care unit was 5% and the willingness to pay per QALY gained was between £20 000 (€23 000; $32 000) and £30 000, the best such strategy was to isolate only those patients at high risk of carrying MRSA (either pre-emptively or after identification by admission and weekly screening for MRSA using chromogenic agar). Universal admission and weekly screening using polymerase chain reaction based detection of MRSA coupled with isolation was unlikely to be cost effective unless prevalence was high (10% of patients colonised with MRSA on admission). Conclusions: MRSA control strategies that use decolonisation are likely to be cost saving in an intensive care unit setting provided resistance is lacking, and combining universal screening using polymerase chain reaction with decolonisation is likely to represent good value for money if untargeted decolonisation is considered unacceptable. In intensivecare units where decolonisation is not implemented, evidence is insufficient to support universal screening for MRSA outside high prevalence settings.
author2 Health Protection Agency
author_facet Health Protection Agency
Julie V. Robotham
Nicholas Graves
Barry D. Cookson
Adrian G. Barnett
Jennie A. Wilson
Jonathan D. Edgeworth
Rahul Batra
Brian H. Cuthbertson
Ben S. Cooper
format Article
author Julie V. Robotham
Nicholas Graves
Barry D. Cookson
Adrian G. Barnett
Jennie A. Wilson
Jonathan D. Edgeworth
Rahul Batra
Brian H. Cuthbertson
Ben S. Cooper
author_sort Julie V. Robotham
title Screening, isolation, and decolonisation strategies in the control of meticillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus in intensive care units: Cost effectiveness evaluation
title_short Screening, isolation, and decolonisation strategies in the control of meticillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus in intensive care units: Cost effectiveness evaluation
title_full Screening, isolation, and decolonisation strategies in the control of meticillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus in intensive care units: Cost effectiveness evaluation
title_fullStr Screening, isolation, and decolonisation strategies in the control of meticillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus in intensive care units: Cost effectiveness evaluation
title_full_unstemmed Screening, isolation, and decolonisation strategies in the control of meticillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus in intensive care units: Cost effectiveness evaluation
title_sort screening, isolation, and decolonisation strategies in the control of meticillin resistant staphylococcus aureus in intensive care units: cost effectiveness evaluation
publishDate 2018
url https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/12261
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