Policy change on male HPV vaccination in Italy
Submitting Institution
Kingston UniversityUnit of Assessment
Business and Management StudiesSummary Impact Type
HealthResearch Subject Area(s)
Medical and Health Sciences: Public Health and Health Services
Economics: Applied Economics
Summary of the impact
Research by G Favato of Kingston University established that it is
cost-effective to vaccinate males against the HPV virus, overturning
previous studies that had suggested such vaccination was not
cost-effective.
This research was presented to the Italian Agency for Drug Approval
(AIFA). As a result, AIFA changed its vaccination policy for HPV, removing
its previous restriction of vaccination to females only and approving
vaccination also for males.
The Italian regions of Emilia-Romagna and Sicily have now begun voluntary
vaccination programmes for males under 26, with economic benefits
amounting to €98.9 million. In addition, Emilia-Romagna has introduced a
vaccination programme for HIV-infected males under 26, providing health
benefits for a high-risk sub-population.
Underpinning research
HPV-related genital cancers and genital warts are increasingly seen as a
major public health concern, and vaccination is now available in all
European countries.
The Italian Agency for Drug Approval (AIFA) first approved the HPV
vaccine Gardasil in February 2008 for 9-26 year olds. Previous economic
studies had suggested that vaccinating males was not incrementally cost
effective, so the programme was restricted to females. This programme
delivered health benefits, but population coverage could be suboptimal and
it did not address HPV-related health outcomes for men.
In 2007, Giampiero Favato produced a novel multi-cohort
cost-effectiveness analysis of HPV vaccination in Italy, based on a Markov
simulation. (This work was produced prior to Favato joining Kingston
University.)
In 2010, after he had joined Kingston University, Favato joined the BEST
(Bayesian modelling assessing the Effectiveness of a vaccination Strategy
To prevent HPV-related diseases) research team. The BEST study was
designed to assess, using a Bayesian approach, the cost-effectiveness of a
multi-cohort vaccination study. Favato's contribution to this study was to
develop his earlier Markov simulation into a more sophisticated Bayesian
model, that would form the core economic model of the research programme.
The BEST study concluded that a vaccination program that includes both
boys and girls can be considered to be a multi-cohort strategy. In such a
vaccination program, involving girls and boys aged 12 years, with reduced
levels of coverage, cost-effectiveness can be improved as a result of the
increased clinical benefits from herd immunity. When the combined clinical
benefits for both sexes were considered, the costs per quality-adjusted
life year (QALY) gained were below the established cost thresholds. Thus,
in contradiction to earlier studies, the vaccination of males was shown to
be cost-effective.
In particular, the research showed the following benefits of universal
vaccination:
-
Health benefits of vaccination occur faster. Less time is
required to reduce HPV-related outcomes with a two-cohort vaccination
than with vaccination of a single cohort of girls aged 12 years. In
particular, the clinical benefits of vaccination are expected to occur
3.8 years earlier with universal vaccination [2].
-
Equality of access to healthcare is improved. The Burden of
Disease study showed that the economic burden attributable to
non-cervical HPV-related diseases is higher among men than among women
(60.6% vs. 39.4% of the total, respectively). The economic burden among
men represented more than one third (38.8%) of the total direct costs of
HPV-related diseases. [3]
-
Reduced health care costs. The two-cohorts strategy results in
a mean net reduction in cost of €80 million to the Italian government
(95% CI, h40.1-h144.7 million) due to the prevention of HPV-related
diseases [1] [4]. This figure stems from the reduced cost of €12,013 per
QALY gained (95% CI, €2,364 - €22,481), which is significantly below the
€30,000 per QALY gained considered the threshold of good value for
money. The GIOVE(Governance of preventive Health Intervention and On
time Verification of its Efficiency) study [3] confirmed the allocative
efficiency of the resources used for the multi-cohort vaccination
programme. The two-cohort vaccination is a public health intervention
that is sustainable from both an organisational and an economic point of
view [2] [3].
-
Reduced uncertainty. The Economic Value of Information (EVI) is
a key parameter in decision analysis because it tests the robustness of
results by taking into account several dimensions of uncertainty. The
EVI indicates how much a rational decision maker should be willing to
spend in order to eliminate uncertainty. The EVI presented in the
research (<€13 per patient) implies that the uncertainty that is
currently present in the model parameters has a very limited impact and
is more robust than previous models [1]. This finding was confirmed by
the real option valuation of competing HPV immunization programmes,
which challenged the cost effectiveness dominance of a single cohort of
12-year old girls. The simultaneous vaccination of 2 cohorts yielded a
real option value (€17,723) equivalent to that attributed to a single
cohort (€17,460) [6].
Key Researcher: Giampiero Favato, Professor of Accounting and Finance,
Kingston University 2010-present.
References to the research
[1] Mennini, F.S., Costa, S., Favato, G. and M. Picardo (2009)
"Anti-HPV vaccination: A review of recent economic data for Italy", Vaccine,
Vol 27, A54-61.
Journal ranking: Vaccine is the pre-eminent journal for those
interested in vaccines and vaccination. 2011 Impact Factor: 3.766
[2] Favato, G., Baio, G., Capone, A. Marcellusi, A., Costa, S.,
Garganese, G., Picardo, M., Drummond, M. Jonsson, B., Scambia, G. Zweifel,
P. and F. Mennini (2012) "Novel Health Economic Evaluation of a
Vaccination Strategy to Prevent HPV-related Diseases: the BEST Study". Medical
Care, Vol. 50, No 12, pg 1076-1085.
Journal ranking: Public, Environmental, and Occupational Health
18/157; Health Care Sciences and Services 7/76; 2011 Impact Factor: 3.411
Note: In early 2013, this paper was reviewed by the National
Institute for Health Research Centre for Reviews and Dissemination (CRD),
with the research selected for publication in the NHS Economic Evaluation
Database. The CRD database provides the NHS with information on the
effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of treatments, and the delivery and
organisation of health care.
[3] Mennini, F., Baio, G., Montagano, G., Causzillo, G. Locuratolo, F.
Becce, G., Gitto, L, Marcellusi, A., Zweifel, P. Capone, A. and G.
Favato. (2012) "Governance of preventive Health Intervention and On
time Verification of its Efficiency: the GIOVE Study", BMJ Open vol 2 no 2
doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2011-000736
Journal ranking: Peer-reviewed, open access journal of BMJ. 2012
Impact Factor: 1.583.
[4] Baio, G., Capone, A., Marcellusi, A., Mennini, FS. and G. Favato.
(2012) "Economic Burden of Human Papillomavirus-Related Diseases in Italy"
PLoS ONE 7(11):e49699. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0049699
Journal ranking: open access peer-reviewed scientific journal
published by the Public Library of Science. 2011 Impact Factor: 4.092
The study received unrestricted funding from Sanofi Pasteur MSD, Italy.
Part of this work was undertaken at University College London Hospital
(UCLH)/UCL, who received a proportion of the funding from the Department
of Health's National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Biomedical
Research Centres funding scheme.
[5] Mennini, F.S., Marcellusi, A., Baio, G., Haeussler, K., Favato, G.
and A. Capone, PRM142 "Loss of health utilities due to hpv-induced
diseases in men and women: A multicenter italian study", Value in
Health, Volume 16, Issue 3, May 2013, Page A38, ISSN 1098-3015,
10.1016/j.jval.2013.03.219.
(http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1098301513002908)
Note: Value in Health is the official journal of the
International Society for Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes Research (ISPOR).
This multidisciplinary publication has an impact factor of 3.433 offers an
outlet for discussion and debate about the principles and substance of
pharmacoeconomics and outcomes research.
[6] Favato, G.., Baio, G., Capone, A. , Macellusi, A. and F.S.
Mennini "A Novel Method to Value Real Options In Health Care: The Case of
a Multicohort Human Papillomavirus Vaccination Strategy", Clinical
Therapeutics, Volume 35, Number 7, 2013, pg. 904-914.
Journal ranking: this journal has a 5 year impact factor of 2.746.
Details of the impact
The research produced health-economic Italian evidence which demonstrated
that HPV vaccination in males is cost-effective. These research outcomes
were incorporated into a reimbursement dossier produced by Sanofi Pasteur
Merck [1], prior to their publication in the open literature.
The company submitted this dossier to AIFA in December 2011 to obtain
reimbursement for Gardasil HPV vaccination to males. On 18 September 2012,
on the basis of the submitted dossier, AIFA approved Gardasil for HPV
vaccination to males, changing its indications as follows:
"Gardasil is a vaccine indicated from 9 year of age....." [2].
Any reference to gender is now removed, thus approving and reimbursing
Gardasil for use in both males and females after 9 years of age.
The funding of the anti-HPV immunisation was limited to a national school
programme targeting 12 year old girls by the 2012-2014 National Plan of
Preventive Vaccination (PNPV, approved earlier on March 2012) [3].
Individual regions had only two options to extend the vaccination coverage
to boys:
- Immunising individuals at risk (HIV infected boys, already included in
the PNPV funding);
- Voluntary vaccination of boys with the HPV vaccine charged at regional
tender cost at no incremental cost to the regions.
In November 2012, two regions (Emilia-Romagna and Sicily) took one or
both options [4].
Both of these regions have undertaken voluntary vaccination of 11-26 year
old males. With an effective coverage of 80%, the total savings accruing
from this vaccination programme are €98.9 million
In addition, Emilia-Romagna undertook the immunisation of HIV-infected
males up to 26 years old resident in the region. This programme provides
immunisation benefits to a high-risk sub-population at a relatively modest
total cost of €40,273
The economic benefits of this policy change were estimated in
collaboration with the Italian Agency for Drug Approval (AIFA) [5].
The medical benefits of the anti-HPV immunisation of a cohort of males
also include:
- Overall health benefits of a universal vaccination
- Improved health outcomes for men, who represent more than one-third
total direct costs of HPV related disease
- Improved `herd immunity' resulting from vaccinating a larger
percentage of the population.
Sources to corroborate the impact
[1] Sanofi Pasteur Merck reimbursement dossier to AIFA called "GARDASIL
suspension for injection". The main contribution of Kingston economic
research to the lengthy dossier is covered on pages 27-35 in the section
titled: "Cost -effectiveness of the Quadrivalent Vaccine in Men"
(annotated copy available — translated from Italian)
[2] New approval (18 September 2012) by AIFA for vaccine Gardasil for
boys and girls from 9 years of age. (Annotated copy available — translated
from Italian)
[3] 2012-2014 National Plan of Preventive Vaccination (PNPV) in
Supplemento ordinario n. 47 of the Gazzetta Ufficiale n. 60 (General
Series), 12 March 2012. Available online at:
http://www.salute.gov.it/imgs/C_17_pubblicazioni_1721_allegato.pdf
[4] Istituto Superiore Sanita' (ISS). Stato di avanzamento della campagna
vaccinale per l'HPV: dati di copertura vaccinale 31/12/2012. Rapporto
Semestrale. Available online at:
http://www.epicentro.iss.it/problemi/hpv/pdf/Aggiornamento_HPV_31122012.pdf
[5] Director of Italian Agency for Drug Approval (AIFA). Economic impact
of Gardasil vaccination. 19th September 2013. (Corroborating Statement
Identifier: 1)