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Published 10 February 2009, doi:10.1136/bmj.b270
Cite this as: BMJ 2009;338:b270
Gerry Richardson, senior research fellow1, Karen Bloor, senior research fellow2, John Williams, professor3, Ian Russell, director4, Dharmaraj Durai, consultant gastroenterologist5, Wai Yee Cheung, senior lecturer3, Amanda Farrin, director and principal statistician (health sciences division)6, Simon Coulton, reader in health services research7
1 Centre for Health Economics and Hull York Medical School (HYMS), University of York, York YO10 5DD, 2 Department of Health Sciences, University of York, York, 3 Centre for Health Information, Research and Evaluation, School of Medicine, Swansea University, Swansea, 4 North Wales Organisation for Randomised Trials in Health, Institute for Medical and Social Care Research, Bangor University, Gwynedd, 5 Wishaw General Hospital, Wishaw, Lanarkshire, 6 Clinical Trials Research Unit, University of Leeds, Leeds, 7 Centre for Health Services Studies, University of Kent, Canterbury, Kent
Correspondence to: G Richardson gar2{at}york.ac.uk
Design As part of a pragmatic randomised trial, the economic analysis calculated incremental cost effectiveness ratios, and generated cost effectiveness acceptability curves to address uncertainty.
Setting 23 hospitals in the United Kingdom.
Participants 67 doctors and 30 nurses, with a total of 1888 patients, from July 2002 to June 2003.
Intervention Diagnostic upper gastrointestinal endoscopy and flexible sigmoidoscopy carried out by doctors or nurses.
Main outcome measure Estimated health gains in QALYs measured with EQ-5D. Probability of cost effectiveness over a range of decision makers willingness to pay for an additional quality adjusted life year (QALY).
Results Although differences did not reach traditional levels of significance, patients in the doctor group gained 0.015 QALYs more than those in the nurse group, at an increased cost of about £56 (
59, $78) per patient. This yields an incremental cost effectiveness ratio of £3660 (
3876, $5097) per QALY. Though there is uncertainty around these results, doctors are probably more cost effective than nurses for plausible values of a QALY.
Conclusions Though upper gastrointestinal endoscopies and flexible sigmoidoscopies carried out by doctors cost slightly more than those by nurses and improved health outcomes only slightly, our analysis favours endoscopies by doctors. For plausible values of decision makers willingness to pay for an extra QALY, endoscopy delivered by nurses is unlikely to be cost effective compared with endoscopy delivered by doctors.
Trial registration International standard RCT 82765705
Consideration of the economics of diagnostic procedures can be complex as the cost effectiveness of the consequent treatment of any discovered condition needs to be considered. Economic evaluations of screening tests often estimate a "cost per condition detected," which is determined partly by the sensitivity and specificity of the test. We focused not on the cost effectiveness of endoscopy itself but on whether or not there is a difference in endoscopy delivered by doctors or nurses. We took a pragmatic approach to the evaluation of this complex intervention,2 in which we assumed that it is the method of delivery (nurse or doctor) that is under consideration, not the intervention itself. We assessed relative cost effectiveness as part of a pragmatic randomised controlled trial undertaken in the UK.3
The clinical study, of which this economic evaluation was part, was a pragmatic randomised trial in 23 hospitals in England, Scotland, and Wales.6 A total of 1888 patients were allocated at random to either a doctor or a nurse for upper gastrointestinal endoscopy or flexible sigmoidoscopy. We collected health outcome measures at baseline, one day, one month, and one year after the intervention. Further details of the trial conduct, and patient sample and characteristics, are described elsewhere.3 We take a UK National Health Service (NHS) perspective with effects assessed in terms of health gains measured in QALYs. As the time horizon of the study was one year, discounting was not appropriate. We did not extrapolate beyond one year as the study was not powered to detect differences between groups in factors influencing long term health outcomes. We used Bayesian analysis in which the parameters have probability distributions. Thus it was possible, and appropriate, to compute the probability of an event being effective or cost effective.
Data collection and outcome measures
We extracted information on resources used during endoscopy of trial patients from resource time sheets. Information collected included duration of endoscopy, number of patients undergoing endoscopy, staffing, and consumables used (except for therapeutic procedures). The duration of procedures was timed from the extubation of one patient to the extubation of the next.
We obtained data on resource use after the endoscopy from examination of patients medical records and patients questionnaires administered at baseline and 12 months (table 1)
. We estimated the cost of the intervention from data on the duration of intervention from the clinical trial multiplied by figures for the cost per minute (for doctor or nurse) estimated from Netten and Curtis.7 Table 2
shows unit cost estimates in 2002-3 prices.
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We converted all EQ-5D scores to "utilities" through a tariff derived from a representative UK population sample.9 We compared mean QALYs generated in the two groups over the 12 month period. We plotted utility at baseline and subsequent points and calculated the area under the curve to estimate QALYs gained (or lost) by each patient. This reflects the fact that the QALY is the product of time and utility10 and assumes that changes in utility over time follow a linear path.11 We adjusted these estimates for baseline EQ-5D as recommended by Manca et al12 and included sex and age as covariates. In a subgroup analysis we separately considered the cost effectiveness of sigmoidoscopy and oesophagogastroduodenoscopy.
Analysis
Resource use and EQ-5D data were missing in several patients, with some missing both. For analysis we assumed that data were missing at random. We used two methods to impute missing data. For EQ-5D, we used the last value carried forward, as patients last score is likely to be the best predictor of the missing value. For resource use we used regression to impute missing values from age, sex, and EQ-5D scores.
Traditionally, cost effectiveness analyses estimate incremental cost effectiveness ratios from mean differences in costs and effects between treatment and control groups, and 95% confidence intervals from the independent samples t test. As interpretation of incremental cost effectiveness ratios derived from more than one quadrant of the cost effectiveness plane is problematic,13 we calculated net monetary benefit14 for each group from trial and imputed data.15 To calculate patient specific net monetary benefits we multiplied each patients QALYs by the assumed maximum value of a QALY and subtracted that patients costs. We used these patient specific net monetary benefits to derive cost effectiveness acceptability curves and estimated the aggregate benefit from the equation:
where
is the decision makers maximum willingness to pay for a QALY. For example, if treatment A has a mean cost of £100 000 and generates a mean of five QALYs with a QALY valued at £30 000, then the net monetary benefit associated with treatment A is £50 000 ((5x£30 000)–£100 000).
Thus the net monetary benefit depends on the value of the QALY, and analysis shows how sensitive the results are to changes in this value. The uncertainty around the net monetary benefit can estimate the probability that a strategy is cost effective through the cost effectiveness acceptability curve. This is a graphical representation of the probability of an intervention being cost effective over a monetary range for a decision makers willingness to pay for an additional unit of health gain. We used the values 0 (which assumes outcomes are equivalent or not valued), £1000, £10 000, £20 000, £30 000, and £50 000 as examples of the decision makers willingness to pay for one extra QALY.
Resource use
Table 3 presents mean levels of resource use
. These estimates arise from responders to questionnaires without imputation. For most variables, the nurse based programme increased resource use (table 3).
Endoscopy by nurses was followed by slightly more use of all primary care resources except home visits from general practitioners. In secondary care there were increased attendances at day hospital and outpatient clinics. These differences were small, however, and did not reach conventional levels of significance.
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While this difference in QALYs seems to be small in absolute terms, it equates to a difference of five to six days of additional perfect health each year. There are several plausible explanations for the improved QALY scores for doctors. The most likely scenario is that nurses requested more subsequent tests and investigations. Such tests and investigations might have a negative effect on patients wellbeing and it is possible that this manifested itself in lower QALY scores in the nurse group.
Total cost
Table 5 shows estimated differences in cost per patient between groups, including the cost of the intervention.
As there was uncertainty around these estimates, the difference was not significant at conventional levels. The intervention cost more in the doctor group because doctors time costs more than nurses time. There was little difference in the duration of endoscopy between groups. In addition patients allocated to doctors had slightly higher costs in both primary and secondary care. The differences in costs associated with resource use in primary and secondary care was small. Though in absolute terms there were (slightly) more contacts in both primary and secondary care in the nurse group than in the doctor group, the doctor group was associated with more costly resources, particularly salary costs. Adjustment for total costs for baseline differences in age and sex made no meaningful difference to the results.
Incremental cost effectiveness ratio (ICER)
The doctor group generated 0.0153 more QALYs than the nurse group, at a net cost of £56 per patient. This resulted in an incremental cost effectiveness ratio of £3660 per QALY. There was much uncertainty around these results, and neither the difference in patients outcomes nor that in costs approached traditional levels of significance. Therefore we used the net monetary benefit approach and generated cost effectiveness acceptability curves.
Net monetary benefits and cost effectiveness acceptability curves
Figure 1
shows the cost effectiveness acceptability curve for values of a QALY between zero and £50 000. Attaching no value to a QALY yields a probability of about 78% of the nurse group being cost effective, implying a chance of 78% that nurses reduced costs. The probability of nurses being cost effective, however, decreases as the value of a QALY increases and as doctors become more cost effective. At a value of £30 000 per QALY, often stated to be the borderline for the NHS, nurses have only a 13% chance of being cost effective. Indeed, for all plausible values of a QALY, doctors are more likely to be cost effective than nurses. There is, however, much uncertainty around this result; the cost effectiveness scatter in figure 2
shows the plots of incremental costs and incremental effects for doctors compared with nurses.
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We had complete medical records and EQ-5D data for 440 patients, 227 (51.6%) in the nurse group and 213 (48.4%) in the doctor group, reflecting the distribution of patients between groups in the full trial. Most missing data omitted a single cost or a single EQ-5D dimension at baseline or follow-up. The resulting estimates were similar to those with imputed data: doctors cost £40 more than nurses (–£148 to £231) but generated 0.021 more QALYs (–0.02 to 0.06). This yields an incremental cost effectiveness ratio of £2060, lower than with imputed data. The smaller sample, however, leads to more uncertainty: the probability of doctors being cost effective never exceeds 84%, whatever the value of a QALY.
Sigmoidoscopy v oesophagogastroduodenoscopy
Sigmoidoscopy showed an incremental cost effectiveness ratio of £2600 per QALY for doctors. Oesophagogastroduodenoscopy cost relatively more for doctors, resulting in a higher ratio of £7850. Both ratios, however, would be acceptable for most reasonable values of a decision makers willingness to pay for a QALY.
Strengths and weaknesses
We used a randomised trial to compare the cost effectiveness of doctors and nurses performing endoscopy. There were missing data both on resource use and patients utility. While imputing these data is not ideal, the results of that imputation are robust, as analysis limited to complete cases yields similar results. The study lasted only one year, though there is potential for later effects in this population—for example, missed diagnoses. A longer trial would be ideal, but the similarity of immediate and delayed complications between nurses and doctors suggests there is little difference in their long term performance.
It is possible that the use of the EQ-5D and the resulting estimates of QALYs are not sensitive enough in these patients to identify differences in their health related quality of life. The results of our economic analysis, however, are similar to those of the clinical analysis in that there was a non-significant effect in favour of doctors.
Hence the QALY gain was greater one year after endoscopy by doctors than by nurses. This is despite patients being more satisfied with endoscopies performed by nurses. This does not imply inconsistency, as short term gains in satisfaction probably reflect differences in process, while medium term gains in quality of life reflect patients perception of outcomes, perhaps in the form of the accuracy of the procedure and their confidence in the results.
Nurse endoscopists might not have reached "steady state" in experience and confidence. As their experience grows, they might become more confident and therefore order fewer follow-up tests. The higher frequency of tests and interventions in the nurse group, however, might reflect intrinsic differences between the professions in terms of attitudes to risk.
Meaning of the study
Though there is debate over the appropriate NHS threshold cost per QALY, Rawlins and Culyer16 argue that the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence would be unlikely to reject a technology with a cost of between £5000 and £15 000 per QALY on grounds of cost effectiveness. On the evidence of this trial, therefore, doctor delivered endoscopy seems cost effective.
This result might surprise some as upper gastrointestinal endoscopies and sigmoidoscopies by nurses cost slightly less than doctors and the difference in health outcomes is small and does not reach traditional levels of significance. Our economic analysis estimates the probability of cost effectiveness from the uncertainty around the estimates of costs and effects, rather than discarding differences that do not reach "significance." Hence this methodological paradigm leads to a different interpretation of our results from that adopted in the clinical effectiveness paper.6
Interpretation depends on the paradigm chosen and the factors under consideration by decision makers. Classic statistical inference fails to reject the null hypotheses that there is no difference in effectiveness or cost effectiveness between endoscopy delivered by doctors and nurses. Policy makers might therefore view nurse endoscopists as an acceptably safe and effective way of changing skill mix in health care, releasing medical resources and increasing the role of nurse specialists. In contrast with the classic statistical approach, economic inference in this context makes decisions by comparing the estimated cost per QALY with a threshold equal to the most that a decision maker would pay for a QALY. In this trial this leads to the conclusion that upper gastrointestinal endoscopy and sigmoidoscopy delivered by doctors would be cost effective at a typical threshold. Bayesian analysis goes further by estimating the probability that the intervention is cost effective in the sense that the estimated cost per QALY exceeds a given threshold. In this trial this form of analysis leads to the conclusion that the average doctor endoscopist has a probability of 80-90% of being more cost effective than the average nurse endoscopist at commonly used values of willingness to pay for a QALY. Policy makers or hospital decision makers pursuing efficiency alone would therefore choose endoscopy delivered by doctors.
Unanswered questions
The choice of skill mix in endoscopy might be influenced by factors other than cost effectiveness, such as affordability, staff shortages, and access to health care, all of which enter into policy decisions. At the start of this trial there was concern about shortages of medical staff but, after the expansion of medical schools, concerns shifted to surpluses and potential unemployment of junior doctors.17 Endoscopy delivered by nurses, in the current state of their training and experience, is unlikely to be cost effective compared with endoscopy delivered by doctors. As nurses grow in experience over time it will be important to continue to monitor both effectiveness and cost effectiveness.
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Cite this as: BMJ 2009;338:b270
Funding: The study was funded by the NIHR Evaluation Trials and Studies Coordinating Centre. All researchers are independent from this source of funding.
Competing interests: None declared.
Ethical approval: The study was approved by the Welsh multicentre research ethics committee and informed consent was given by all patients.
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