Cost-effectiveness of nutrient supplementation in cancer survivors

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Abstract

Cancer patients are at risk for malnutrition; the aim of this study was to provide a cost-effectiveness analysis of dietary supplementation in cancer survivors. We estimated prevalence of supplementation, hospitalization rates, quality of life (QOL), cost of care and mortality among cancer survivors. We built a decision analytic model to simulate life-long costs of health care and sup-plementation and QOL among cancer survivors with and without supplementation. Cost of supplements was derived from national pharmacy databases including single-and multivitamin for-mularies. One-way and probabilistic sensitivity analysis were performed to evaluate the robustness of the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) to changes in supplementation costs and duration. The study cohort represented the national cancer survivor population (average age 61 years, 85% white, 52% male, and 94% insured). Hospitalization rates for supplement users and non-users were 12% and 21%, respectively. The cost of hospitalization was $4030. Supplementation was associated with an additional 0.48 QALYs (10.26 vs. 9.78) at the incremental cost of $2094 ($236,933 vs. $234,839) over the remaining lifetime of survivors (on average 13 years). Adequate nutrition provides a cost-effective strategy to achieving potentially optimum health. Further studies are needed to determine the effects of specific nutrient doses and supplementation on long-term outcomes per cancer type.

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APA

Shaver, A. L., Tufuor, T. A., Nie, J., Ekimura, S., Marshall, K., Mitmesser, S. H., & Noyes, K. (2021). Cost-effectiveness of nutrient supplementation in cancer survivors. Cancers, 13(24). https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13246276

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