Cost-effectiveness of psychotherapy for cluster B personality disorders

Authors
  • D.I. Soeteman
  • R. Verheul
  • J. Delimon
  • A.M.M.A. Meerman
  • E. van den Eijnden
  • B.V. Rossum
  • U. Ziegler
  • M. Thunnissen
  • J.J.V. Busschbach
  • J.J. Kim
Publication date 2010
Journal British Journal of Psychiatry
Volume | Issue number 196 | 5
Pages (from-to) 396-403
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Psychology Research Institute (PsyRes)
Abstract
Declaration of interest: None.
Background: Recommendations on current clinical guidelines are informed by limited economic evidence.
Aims: A formal economic evaluation of three modalities of psychotherapy for patients with cluster B personality disorders.
Method: A probabilistic decision-analytic model to assess the cost-effectiveness of out-patient, day hospital and in-patient psychotherapy over 5 years in terms of cost per recovered patient-year and cost per quality-adjusted life-year (QALY). Analyses were conducted from both societal and payer perspectives.
Results: From the societal perspective, the most cost-effective choice switched from out-patient to day hospital psychotherapy at a threshold of {euro}12 274 per recovered patient-year; and from day hospital to in-patient psychotherapy at {euro}113 298. In terms of cost per QALY, the optimal strategy changed at {euro}56 325 and {euro}286 493 per QALY respectively. From the payer perspective, the switch points were at {euro}9895 and {euro}155 797 per recovered patient-year, and {euro}43 427 and {euro}561 188 per QALY.
Conclusions: Out-patient psychotherapy and day hospital psychotherapy are the optimal treatments for patients with cluster B personality disorders in terms of cost per recovered patient-year and cost per QALY.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1192/bjp.bp.109.070482
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