Cost-effectiveness of a novel urethral catheter safety device in preventing catheterization injuries in the UK

J Med Econ. 2024 Jan-Dec;27(1):154-164. doi: 10.1080/13696998.2023.2298121. Epub 2024 Jan 10.

Abstract

Aims: Intraurethral catheter balloon inflation is a substantial contributor to significant catheter-related urethral injury. A novel safety valve has been designed to prevent these balloon-inflation injuries. The purpose of this evaluation was to assess the cost-effectiveness of urethral catheterisation with the safety valve added to a Foley catheter versus the current standard of care (Foley catheter alone).

Materials and methods: The analysis was conducted from the UK public payer perspective on a hypothetical cohort of adults requiring transurethral catheterization. A decision tree was used to capture outcomes in the first 30 days following transurethral catheterization, followed by a Markov model to estimate outcomes over a person's remaining lifetime. Clinical outcomes included catheter balloon injuries [CBIs], associated short-term complications, urethral stricture disease, life years and QALYs. Health-economic outcomes included total costs, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, net monetary benefit (NMB) and net health benefit.

Results: Over a person's lifetime, the safety valve was predicted to reduce CBIs by 0.04 per person and CBI-related short-term complications by 0.03 per person, and nearly halve total costs. The safety valve was dominant, resulting in 0.02 QALYs gained and relative cost savings of £93.19 per person. Probabilistic sensitivity analysis indicated that the safety valve would be cost-saving in 97% of simulations run versus standard of care.

Conclusions: The addition of a novel safety valve aiming to prevent CBIs during transurethral catheterization to current standard of care was estimated to bring both clinical benefits and cost savings.

Keywords: C; C02; Catheter balloon injury; I; I00; cost-effectiveness analysis; economic evaluation; transurethral catheterization; urethral safety valve.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Cost-Benefit Analysis
  • Humans
  • Protective Devices
  • Quality-Adjusted Life Years
  • United Kingdom
  • Urinary Catheterization* / adverse effects
  • Urinary Catheters* / adverse effects