Cost-effectiveness of school-based asthma screening in an urban setting

J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2010 Mar;125(3):643-50, 650.e1-650.e12. doi: 10.1016/j.jaci.2009.12.984.

Abstract

Background: Much has been done to promote population-based childhood asthma screening; however, concerns remain regarding its cost-effectiveness.

Objectives: To conduct a cost-effectiveness analysis of school-based asthma screening strategies.

Methods: A 5 health state Markov approach (symptom-free, symptom, exacerbation recovery, emergency department, and hospitalization day) was used to evaluate school-based screening in a simulated population of urban elementary-age school children. Two questionnaire and 2 multistage strategies incorporating spirometry or spirometry with exercise testing were evaluated from the societal perspective by using 365 daily cycles. The outcome was 2006 dollars per quality-adjusted life year (QALY).

Results: The most efficient strategy identified children with previously diagnosed but poorly controlled asthma at a cost of $150,000 per QALY (95% CI, $65,800-$318,000). Uncertainty surrounding the cost-effectiveness estimate was primarily a result of the symptom day preference weight estimate (44%), the probability of confirmation after screening (17%), the adequacy of asthma control in the population (9%), and the estimated treatment effect on symptoms (6%). Screening generated an additional 21 symptom-free day equivalents per child identified with previously diagnosed but not well controlled asthma and led to $85.55, $12.36, and $2.58 in additional screening, daily treatment, and indirect costs and $5.01 less in emergency department and hospitalization costs.

Conclusion: Population-based asthma screening is not cost-effective at $50,000 per QALY and has only a 20% chance of being cost-effective at $100,000 per QALY. The most efficient approach is to screen for previously diagnosed but poorly controlled asthma. Linking screening with better treatment, and long-term adherence strategies might yield future cost-effective approaches.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Asthma / diagnosis*
  • Asthma / economics*
  • Child
  • Cost-Benefit Analysis
  • Humans
  • Markov Chains
  • Mass Screening / economics*
  • Models, Econometric
  • Quality-Adjusted Life Years
  • School Health Services
  • Schools
  • Urban Population