TY - JOUR
T1 - Applying a simplified economic evaluation approach to evaluate infertility treatments in clinical practice
AU - Feng, Qian
AU - Li, Wentao
AU - Callander, Emily J.
AU - Wang, Rui
AU - Mol, Ben W.
N1 - Funding Information:
B.W.M. is supported by an NHMRC Investigator grant (GNT1176437); B.W.M. reports consultancy, research grants, and travel support from Merck. E.J.C. is supported by an NHMRC Fellowship (GNT1159536). E.J.C. reports a grant from Ferring Pharmaceuticals. W.L. is supported by an NHMRC Investigator grant (GTN2016729). R.W. is supported by an NHMRC Investigator grant GNT2009767. Q.F. reports a PhD scholarship from Merck.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.
PY - 2024/3
Y1 - 2024/3
N2 - IVF is the backbone of infertility treatment, but due to its costs, it is not affordable for everyone. The cost of IVF is further escalated by interventions added to the routine treatment, which are claimed to boost pregnancy rates, so-called add-ons. Consequently, it is critical to offset the increased costs of an intervention against a potentially higher benefit. Here, we propose using a simplified framework considering the cost of a standard IVF procedure to create one live-born baby as a benchmark for the cost-effectiveness of other fertility treatments, add-ons inclusive. This framework is a simplified approach to a formal economic evaluation, enabling a rapid assessment of cost effectiveness in clinical settings. For a 30-year-old woman, assuming a 44.6% cumulative live birth rate and a cost of $12 000 per complete cycle, the cost to create one live-born baby would be ~$27 000 (i.e. willingness to pay). Under this concept, the decision whether to accept or reject a new treatment depends from an economic perspective on the incremental cost per additional live birth from the new treatment/add-on, with the $27 000 per live-born baby as a reference threshold. This threshold can vary with women’s age, and other factors such as the economic perspective and risk of side effects can play a role. If a new add-on or treatment costs >$27 000 per live birth, it might be more rational to invest in a new IVF cycle rather than spending on the add-on. With the increasing number of novel technologies in IVF and the lack of a rapid approach to evaluate their cost-effectiveness, this simplified framework will help with a more objective assessment of the cost-effectiveness of infertility treatments, including add-ons.
AB - IVF is the backbone of infertility treatment, but due to its costs, it is not affordable for everyone. The cost of IVF is further escalated by interventions added to the routine treatment, which are claimed to boost pregnancy rates, so-called add-ons. Consequently, it is critical to offset the increased costs of an intervention against a potentially higher benefit. Here, we propose using a simplified framework considering the cost of a standard IVF procedure to create one live-born baby as a benchmark for the cost-effectiveness of other fertility treatments, add-ons inclusive. This framework is a simplified approach to a formal economic evaluation, enabling a rapid assessment of cost effectiveness in clinical settings. For a 30-year-old woman, assuming a 44.6% cumulative live birth rate and a cost of $12 000 per complete cycle, the cost to create one live-born baby would be ~$27 000 (i.e. willingness to pay). Under this concept, the decision whether to accept or reject a new treatment depends from an economic perspective on the incremental cost per additional live birth from the new treatment/add-on, with the $27 000 per live-born baby as a reference threshold. This threshold can vary with women’s age, and other factors such as the economic perspective and risk of side effects can play a role. If a new add-on or treatment costs >$27 000 per live birth, it might be more rational to invest in a new IVF cycle rather than spending on the add-on. With the increasing number of novel technologies in IVF and the lack of a rapid approach to evaluate their cost-effectiveness, this simplified framework will help with a more objective assessment of the cost-effectiveness of infertility treatments, including add-ons.
KW - add-ons
KW - benchmark for cost-effectiveness
KW - cost effectiveness
KW - infertility treatments
KW - IVF
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85186314911&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1093/humrep/dead265
DO - 10.1093/humrep/dead265
M3 - Review Article
C2 - 38148026
AN - SCOPUS:85186314911
SN - 0268-1161
VL - 39
SP - 448
EP - 453
JO - Human Reproduction
JF - Human Reproduction
IS - 3
ER -