Litcius/Paper detail

Newborn screening for inherited metabolic diseases using tandem mass spectrometry in China: Outcome and cost–utility analysis

Zixuan Zhao, Chi Chen, Xueshan Sun, Duo Zhou, Xinwen Huang, Hengjin Dong

2021Journal of Medical Screening30 citationsDOI

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Few studies in China have focused on the economic evaluation of newborn screening (NBS) for inherited metabolic disorders (IMDs) by tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS). This study assesses the total costs, benefits, benefit-cost ratio (BCR), cost-utility ratio (CUR) and incremental cost-utility ratio (ICUR) of NBS using MS/MS compared to the non-screened group. METHODS: The NBS outcomes of newborns who underwent MS/MS screening for IMDs in 2009-2018 were retrospectively reviewed. Records were extracted from a screening management system at the NBS Center of Zhejiang province. A cost-benefit analysis of screening was conducted, assessing screening costs for each subject, and direct and indirect treatment costs for IMDs detected by screening. The putative benefit of clinical outcomes related to early diagnosis was assumed to be improvement in quality of life and prolonged life expectancy in the screened group, as compared to the non-screened group. RESULTS: = 211). The difference in quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) ranged from 0.78 to 15.4 in the screened group. The CUR was CNY¥ 116,183.89/QALY in the screened group and CNY¥ 3,078,823.65/QALY in the non-screened group. The ICUR was CNY¥ -768,428.76/QALY, and the BCR was 6.09. CONCLUSIONS: NBS using MS/MS can be considered cost-effective in China. The nationwide promotion of NBS using MS/MS deserves priority consideration and sufficient publicity.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineNewborn screeningCost-effectiveness analysisQuality of life (healthcare)PediatricsInternal medicineCost effectivenessNursingRisk analysis (engineering)Metabolism and Genetic DisordersGenomics and Rare DiseasesDiet and metabolism studies