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Journal article

Reporting Cost-effectiveness Analyses With Confidence-Reply

Abstract

In Reply. —The Panel on Cost-Effectiveness in Health and Medicine has recommended that summary tables reporting incremental cost-effectiveness exclude ratios for dominated alternatives.1,2 Drs Sacristán and Obenchain correctly point out that, even if a medical intervention is judged on the basis of baseline estimates to be dominated by another intervention (eg, to have higher cost but produce less health benefit than the other), the conclusion of dominance may be premature owing to uncertainties in baseline parameters. Sacristán and Obenchain would recommend use of CIs for reported cost-effectiveness ratios on all alternatives.Our specific recommendation that cost-effectiveness ratios should not appear for dominated alternatives is intended to reduce confusion concerning the interpretation of cost-effectiveness results tables. The calculation of base-case results for the efficient options (those not dominated under the main assumptions in the analysis) is less transparent if ratios for dominated programs are included in cost-effectiveness tables.Sacristán and Obenchain's main

Authors

Siegel JE; Weinstein MC; Fryback DG; Manning WG; Torrance GW; Russell LB; Gold MR

Journal

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, Vol. 277, No. 5, pp. 375–375

Publisher

American Medical Association (AMA)

Publication Date

February 5, 1997

DOI

10.1001/jama.1997.03540290027021

ISSN

0098-7484

Labels

Sustainable Development Goals (SDG)

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