4.6 Article

A Comparison of the Cost-Effectiveness of Lifestyle Interventions in Pregnancy

Journal

VALUE IN HEALTH
Volume 25, Issue 2, Pages 194-202

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jval.2021.07.013

Keywords

cost-effectiveness; decision tree model; diet; gestational diabetes mellitus; hypertensive disorders in pregnancy; intervention; lifestyle interventions; physical activity; pregnancy

Funding

  1. Australian Government's Medical Research Future Fund (MRFF)
  2. The MRFF
  3. MRFF
  4. The UK National Institute for Health Research

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This study compared the cost-effectiveness of four types of antenatal lifestyle interventions with standard care. The findings suggest that physical activity interventions may be cost-saving, while diet and diet with physical activity interventions can reduce adverse events. Mixed interventions were not effective and were dominated by standard care.
Objectives: Lifestyle interventions during pregnancy improve maternal and infant outcomes. We aimed to compare the costeffectiveness of 4 antenatal lifestyle intervention types with standard care. Methods: A decision tree model was constructed to compare lifestyle intervention effects from a novel meta-analysis. The target population was women with singleton pregnancies and births at more than 20 weeks' gestation. Interventions were categorized as diet, diet with physical activity, physical activity, and mixed (lacking structured diet and, or, physical activity components). The outcome of interest was cost per case prevented (gestational diabetes, hypertensive disorders in pregnancy, cesarean birth) expressed as an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) from the Australian public healthcare perspective. Scenario analyses were included for all structured interventions combined and by adding neonatal intensive care unit costs. Costs were estimated from published data and consultations with experts and updated to 2019 values. Discounting was not applied owing to the short time horizon. Results: Physical activity interventions reduced adverse maternal events by 4.2% in the intervention group compared with standard care and could be cost saving. Diet and diet with physical activity interventions reduced events by 3.5% (ICER = A$4882) and 2.9% (ICER = A$2020), respectively. Mixed interventions did not reduce events and were dominated by standard care. In scenario analysis, all structured interventions combined and all interventions when including neonatal intensive care unit costs (except mixed) may be cost saving. Probabilistic sensitivity analysis showed that for physical activity and all structured interventions combined, the probability of being cost saving was 58% and 41%, respectively. Conclusions: Governments can expect a good return on investment and cost savings when implementing effective lifestyle interventions population-wide.

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