Economic Evaluation of Different Organizational Models for the Management of Patients with Hepatitis C

Authors

  • Stefano Fagiuoli U.O.C. Gastroenterologia - Epatologia e Trapiantologia - ASST Papa Giovanni XXIII - Bergamo
  • Luisa Pasulo U.O.C. Gastroenterologia - Epatologia e Trapiantologia - ASST Papa Giovanni XXIII - Bergamo
  • Franco Maggiolo U.O.C. Malattie Infettive – ASST Papa Giovanni XXII - Bergamo
  • Rosaria Spinella Medicina Istituti Ospedalieri Bergamaschi - Bergamo
  • Paolo Del Poggio Medicina Istituti Ospedalieri Bergamaschi - Bergamo
  • Roberto Boldizzoni U.O.C. Medicina ASST Bergamo Ovest – Treviglio (Bg)
  • Mariella Di Marco U.O.C. Medicina A.S.S.T. Bergamo Est - Ospedale "Bolognini" – Seriate (Bg)
  • Alessandro Aronica Tefen & Partners Management Consulting
  • Chiara Benedetti Tefen & Partners Consulting
  • Paolo Correale Tefen & Partners Consulting
  • Chiara Garavaglia Tefen & Partners Consulting
  • Carlo Nicora Tefen & Partners Consulting

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7175/fe.v20i1.1374

Keywords:

Hepatitis C, Italy, Models, Organizational, Antiviral Agents, DAA, HCV, Hub & Spoke, Center of Excellence

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Access to Directly Acting Antivirals (DAAs) for Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) treatment in Italy was initially restricted to severe patients. In 2017, AIFA expanded access to all patients, to achieve elimination by 2030.

AIM: To investigate the impact of different hospitals’ organizational models on elimination timing, treatment capacity and direct costs.

METHODS: Most Regional healthcare systems in Italy deploy a Center of Excellence (CoE) organizational model, where patients are referred to a single major hospital in the area, which is the only one that can prescribe and deliver DAAs. The study was conducted at Bergamo’s (Lombardy, Italy) Papa Giovanni XXIII hospital (PG-23), which deploys a Hub&Spoke model: the Hub (PG-23) prescribes and delivers DAAs while Spokes (four smaller hospitals) can only prescribe them. The study compares the two models (CoE vs. H&S). Patient journey and workloads were mapped and quantified through interviews with hospital stakeholders. Cost data were collected through the hospital’s IT system; the sample comprised 2,277 HCV patients, over one year.

RESULTS: The study calculated the average cost to treat HCV patients (~ € 1,470 per patient). Key cost drivers are lab tests (60%) and specialist visits (30%). Over one year, H&S can treat 68% more patients than CoE. As deferred patients absorb up to 40% of total costs, the “Optimized” model was designed by streamlining specialists’ visits and involving general practitioners during follow-up. “Optimized” model increases treatment capacity and reduces costs of deferred patients by 72% vs CoE.

CONCLUSION: The study demonstrates the importance of organizational models in efficiently achieving 2030 elimination.

References

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Published

2019-01-28

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Section

Original Research

How to Cite

1.
Fagiuoli S, Pasulo L, Maggiolo F, et al. Economic Evaluation of Different Organizational Models for the Management of Patients with Hepatitis C. FE. 2019;20(1). doi:10.7175/fe.v20i1.1374