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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 December 2022
The severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), which causes coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), is a single-strand ribonucleic acid virus that was first identified in January 2020 in patients with viral pneumonia in Wuhan, China. The virus has since spread rapidly around the world, leading the World Health Organization to declare it a pandemic on 11 March 2020. In Brazil there have been 21.8 million cases of SARS-CoV-2 infection and 608,500 deaths. The objective of this study was to evaluate the cost utility of the Oxford, CoronaVac, and Janssen vaccines from the perspective of the Brazilian public health system.
Three microsimulation models were constructed using individual data. The simulations contained seven transition states related to the natural history of COVID-19. The model with a daily cycle had a time horizon of one year and used data from 289 days of the pandemic. The analysis considered direct medical costs from the Brazilian health system perspective. Outpatient, hospital, and mortality databases were used for the model inputs and patient data were stratified by age. Effective vaccines reduced the likelihood of patients becoming ill. Information on the quality of life of patients receiving treatment in the outpatient or hospital setting and disease sequelae were extracted from the published literature. The main outcome of the analysis was quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs).
The vaccines had incremental cost-utility ratios ranging from USD 4,121 (Oxford) to USD 3,160 per QALY (CoronaVac). The older the population, the lower the incremental cost-utility ratio. Given a willingness-to-pay threshold of BRL 3,129 per QALY, all the vaccines were considered cost effective in the probabilistic sensitivity analysis. The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio stratified by age ranged from USD 6,327 per QALY in patients older than 75 years (Janssen) to USD 20,993 per QALY in patients younger than 59 years (CoronaVac).
The results of this analysis, stratified by patient age, can help in the preparation of a vaccination prioritization plan.