Direct treatment costs of HIV/AIDS in Portugal

Authors

  • Julian Perelman Universidade Nova de Lisboa; Escola Nacional de Saude Publica
  • Joana Alves Universidade Nova de Lisboa; Escola Nacional de Saude Publica
  • Ana Claudia Miranda Centro Hospitalar de Lisboa Ocidental; Hospital Egas Moniz
  • Ceu Mateus Universidade Nova de Lisboa; Escola Nacional de Saude Publica
  • Kamal Mansinho Centro Hospitalar de Lisboa Ocidental; Hospital Egas Moniz
  • Francisco Antunes Centro Hospitalar de Lisboa Norte; Hospital de Santa Maria
  • Joaquim Oliveira Hospitais da Universidade de Coimbra
  • Jose Pocas Centro Hospitalar de Setubal
  • Manuela Doroana Centro Hospitalar de Lisboa Norte; Hospital de Santa Maria
  • Rui Marques Hospital de Sao Joao
  • Eugenio Teofilo Centro Hospitalar de Lisboa Central; Hospital dos Capuchos
  • Joao Pereira Universidade Nova de Lisboa; Escola Nacional de Saude Publica

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/rsp.v47i5.76696

Abstract

OBJECTIVE To analyze the direct medical costs of HIV/AIDS in Portugal from the perspective of the National Health Service. METHODS A retrospective analysis of medical records was conducted for 150 patients from five specialized centers in Portugal in 2008. Data on utilization of medical resources during 12 months and patients’ characteristics were collected. A unit cost was applied to each care component using official sources and accounting data from National Health Service hospitals. RESULTS The average cost of treatment was 14,277 €/patient/year. The main cost-driver was antiretroviral treatment (€ 9,598), followed by hospitalization costs (€ 1,323). Treatment costs increased with the severity of disease from € 11,901 (>; 500 CD4 cells/µl) to € 23,351 (CD4 count ≤ 50 cells/ µl). Cost progression was mainly due to the increase in hospitalization costs, while antiretroviral treatment costs remained stable over disease stages. CONCLUSIONS The high burden related to antiretroviral treatment is counterbalanced by relatively low hospitalization costs, which, however, increase with severity of disease. The relatively modest progression of total costs highlights that alternative public health strategies that do not affect transmission of disease may only have a limited impact on expenditure, since treatment costs are largely dominated by constant antiretroviral treatment costs.

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Published

2013-10-01

Issue

Section

Original Articles

How to Cite

Perelman, J., Alves, J., Miranda, A. C., Mateus, C., Mansinho, K., Antunes, F., Oliveira, J., Pocas, J., Doroana, M., Marques, R., Teofilo, E., & Pereira, J. (2013). Direct treatment costs of HIV/AIDS in Portugal. Revista De Saúde Pública, 47(5), 865-872. https://doi.org/10.1590/rsp.v47i5.76696