Publication

Economic assessments of the burden of congenital cytomegalovirus infection and the cost-effectiveness of prevention strategies.

Journal : Seminars in perinatology
Authors : Grosse SD, Dollard SC, Ortega-Sanchez IR
10.1016/j.semperi.2021.151393 : DOI
33551180 : PMID
PMC8335728 : PMC-ID

Objective

This is a critical review of published economic analyses on congenital cytomegalovirus infection and strategies for its detection and prevention.

Findings

The review identified four cost-of-illness studies and nine cost-effectiveness analyses: three of vaccination of young women, two of prenatal screening, and four of newborn screening. All reported either large economic costs or favorable cost-effectiveness of interventions. However, sensitivity analyses did not address some of the most critical assumptions.

Conclusions

Reviewed economic analyses overattributed certain adverse long-term outcomes to congenital cytomegalovirus infection, while other long-term costs were not included. Overall, limited conceptual frameworks, unrepresentative data sources, and unsupported or inadequately documented assumptions regarding outcomes and costs hinder the ability of policymakers to draw conclusions. A major challenge is the limited information on long-term outcomes and costs for representative cohorts of individuals with congenital cytomegalovirus, which further research could helpfully address.