4.2 Article

A consensus-based checklist for the critical appraisal of cost-of-illness (COI) studies

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0266462323000193

Keywords

Checklist; cost-of-illness; economic burden; burden of disease; critical appraisal

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The objective of this study was to develop a consensus-based checklist for the critical appraisal of cost-of-illness studies. The checklist, comprising seventeen main questions, aims to improve comprehensiveness, transparency, and consistency in these studies. The study also developed guidance statements explaining each question and suggested answer categories to ensure better comparability across international studies.
ObjectivesTo develop a consensus-based checklist that can be used as a minimum standard to appraise the comprehensiveness, transparency and consistency of cost-of-illness (COI) studies. This is important when, for instance, reviewing and assessing COI studies as part of a systematic review or when building an economic model. MethodsThe development process of the consensus-based checklist involved six steps: (i) a scoping review, (ii) an assessment and comparison of the different checklists and their questions, (iii) the development of a (preliminary) checklist, (iv) expert interviews, (v) the finalization of the checklist, and (vi) the development of guidance statements explaining each question. ResultsThe result was a consensus-based checklist for the critical appraisal of COI studies, comprising seventeen main questions (and some additional subquestions) across three domains: (i) study characteristics; (ii) methodology and cost analysis; and (iii) results and reporting. Guidance statements were developed describing the purpose and meaning behind each question and listing examples of best practice. The following answer categories were suggested to be applied when answering the questions in the checklist: Yes, Partially, No, Not Applicable, or Unclear. ConclusionsThe consensus-based checklist for COI studies is a first step toward standardizing the critical appraisal of COI studies and is one that could be considered a minimum standard. The checklist can help to improve comprehensiveness, transparency and consistency in COI studies, to address heterogeneity, and to enable better comparability of methodological approaches across international studies.

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