2018
DOI: 10.1007/s40273-017-0606-1
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Cost-Effectiveness Thresholds: the Past, the Present and the Future

Abstract: Cost-effectiveness (CE) thresholds are being discussed more frequently and there have been many new developments in this area; however, there is a lack of understanding about what thresholds mean and their implications. This paper provides an overview of the CE threshold literature. First, the meaning of a CE threshold and the key assumptions involved (perfect divisibility, marginal increments in budget, etc.) are highlighted using a hypothetical example, and the use of historic/heuristic estimates of the thre… Show more

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Cited by 150 publications
(124 citation statements)
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“…Several studies have estimated thresholds for high-income countries, ranging from €18,000 to €200,000 per QALY (Claxton et al, 2015b;Thokala et al, 2018;Vallejo-Torres et al, 2016;Vallejo-Torres et al, 2017). Literature suggests that willingness-to-pay estimates tend to be higher than supply-side estimates (Vallejo-Torres et al, 2016).…”
Section: Relation To the Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Several studies have estimated thresholds for high-income countries, ranging from €18,000 to €200,000 per QALY (Claxton et al, 2015b;Thokala et al, 2018;Vallejo-Torres et al, 2016;Vallejo-Torres et al, 2017). Literature suggests that willingness-to-pay estimates tend to be higher than supply-side estimates (Vallejo-Torres et al, 2016).…”
Section: Relation To the Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Netherlands currently uses a range of reference values for new drugs of between €20,000 and €80,000 (Reckers-Droog, van Exel, & Brouwer, 2018). However, these thresholds have no empirical base and thus may not truly reflect the opportunity costs, risking inefficient reimbursement decisions (Thokala, Ochalek, Leech, & Tong, 2018). In general, a distinction is made between demand-side and supply-side thresholds, with demand-side thresholds reflecting willingness-to-pay and supply-side thresholds reflecting opportunity costs of spending decisions (Himani Pandey, Paulden, & McCabe, 2018).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Finally, constrained optimization methods have also been applied to disease diagnosis [21,22], the development of optimal treatment algorithms [23,24], and the optimal design of clinical trials [25]. Health technology assessment using tools from constrained optimization methods is also gaining popularity [26]. We also encourage the readers to refer to the initial ISPOR Optimization Emerging Good Practices Task Force Report, which presented a more comprehensive overview of the different applications for which optimization techniques can be used [1].…”
Section: Overview Of Applications Of Constrained Optimization In Healmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…6e8 Instead, researchers have sought to empirically estimate the health effects of increasing/ decreasing expenditure to determine the marginal cost per QALY or DALY. 9 To date, empirical estimates of health opportunity costs of government expenditure based on within-country data are available for only a few countries, including the United Kingdom, Spain, the Netherlands, and Australia. 10e14 Placeholder estimates of health opportunity costs of government expenditure for a wider range of countries are available based on either extrapolating existing estimates or using published elasticities of the effect of expenditure on health.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%