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Cost-effectiveness analysis of BNT162b2 COVID-19 booster vaccination in the United States

Rui Li, Hanting Liu, Christopher K. Fairley, Zhuoru Zou, Li Xie, Xinghui Li, Mingwang Shen, Yan Li, Lei Zhang

2022International Journal of Infectious Diseases60 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of a booster strategy in the United States. METHODS: We developed a decision-analytic Markov model of COVID-19 to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of a booster strategy of the Pfizer-BioNTech BNT162b2 (administered 6 months after the second dose) among older adults from a healthcare system perspective. RESULTS: Compared with 2 doses of BNT162b2 without a booster, the booster strategy in a 100,000 cohort of older adults would incur an additional cost of $3.4 million in vaccination cost but save $6.7 million in direct medical cost and gain 3.7 quality-adjusted life-years in 180 days. This corresponds to a benefit-cost ratio of 1.95 and a net monetary benefit of $3.4 million. Probabilistic sensitivity analysis indicates that a booster strategy has a high chance (67%) of being cost-effective. Notably, the cost-effectiveness of the booster strategy is highly sensitive to the population incidence of COVID-19, with a cost-effectiveness threshold of 8.1/100,000 person-day. If vaccine efficacies reduce by 10%, 30%, and 50%, this threshold will increase to 9.7/100,000, 13.9/100,000, and 21.9/100,000 person-day, respectively. CONCLUSION: Offering the BNT162b2 booster to older adults aged ≥65 years in the United States is likely to be cost-effective. Less efficacious vaccines and boosters may still be cost-effective in settings of high SARS-CoV-2 transmission.

Topics & Concepts

Booster (rocketry)Cost effectivenessMedicineCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)VaccinationCost–benefit analysisRisk analysis (engineering)VirologyEngineeringInternal medicineInfectious disease (medical specialty)DiseaseBiologyEcologyAerospace engineeringSARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 ResearchVaccine Coverage and HesitancyCOVID-19 epidemiological studies
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