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Cost-Effectiveness of Pneumococcal Vaccination of Older People:  A Study in 5 Western European Countries
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Cost-Effectiveness of Pneumococcal Vaccination of Older People: A Study in 5 Western European Countries

A Ament, R Baltussen, G Duru, C Rigaud-Bully, D de Graeve, Å örtqvist, B Jönsson, J Verhaegen, J Gaillat, P Christie, …
Clinical Infectious Diseases, Vol.31(2), pp.444-450
2000-08-01
PMID: 10987703

Abstract

Cost effectiveness Cost savings Pneumococcal vaccine Pneumonia Pneumococcal Quality-adjusted life years Vaccination Mortability Older adult Invasive pneumococcal disease
Pneumococcal vaccination of older persons is thought to be cost-effective in preventing pneumococcal pneumonia, but evidence of clinical protection is uncertain. Because there is better evidence of vaccination effectiveness against invasive pneumococcal disease, we determined the cost-effectiveness of pneumococcal vaccination of persons aged ≥65 years in preventing hospital admission for both invasive pneumococcal disease and pneumococcal pneumonia in 5 western European countries. In the base case analyses, the cost-effectiveness ratios for preventing invasive disease varied from ∼11,000 to ∼33,000 European currency units (ecu) per quality-adjusted life year (QALY). Assuming a common incidence (50 cases per 100,000) and mortality rate (20%-40%) for invasive disease, the cost-effectiveness ratios were <12,000 ecu per QALY in all 5 countries. For preventing pneumococcal pneumonia, vaccinating all elderly persons would be highly cost-effective to cost saving. Public health authorities should consider policies for encouraging pneumococcal vaccination for all persons aged ≥65 years.
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https://doi.org/10.1086/313977View
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