PMCID: 6543798 (link)
Year: 2019
Reviewer Paper ID: 20
Project Paper ID: 81
Q1 - Title(show question description)
Explanation: The title of the manuscript clearly identifies the study as an economic evaluation by using the term 'Cost and Cost-Effectiveness Analysis,' and explicitly specifies the intervention being compared, which is a 'Digital Behavioral Weight Gain Prevention Intervention in Primary Care Practice'.
Quotes:
-
A Digital Behavioral Weight Gain Prevention Intervention in Primary Care Practice: Cost and Cost-Effectiveness Analysis
Q2 - Abstract(show question description)
Explanation: The abstract provides a structured summary that includes the context, key methods, results, and alternative analyses. It outlines the background and objective of the study, the methods used for cost and cost-effectiveness analysis, the results including the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) and sensitivity analysis, and concludes with a statement about the cost-effectiveness of the intervention.
Quotes:
-
Background: Obesity is one of the largest drivers of health care spending but nearly half of the population with obesity demonstrate suboptimal readiness for weight loss treatment.
-
Objective: The aim of this study was to evaluate the costs and cost-effectiveness of a digital weight gain prevention intervention (Shape) for black women.
-
Methods: A cost and cost-effectiveness analysis based on a randomized clinical trial of the Shape intervention was conducted from the payer perspective.
-
Results: Shape cost an average of US $758 per participant. The base-case model... generated an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) of US $55,264 per QALY.
-
Conclusions: Results suggest that the Shape intervention is cost-effective based on established benchmarks.
Q3 - Background and objectives(show question description)
Explanation: The introduction provides context for the study by discussing the prevalence of obesity among black women and the potential health and economic benefits of successful weight interventions for this group. It states the study aim of analyzing the cost-effectiveness of the Shape intervention, making it relevant for decision-making in policy or practice.
Quotes:
-
Nationally, almost 55% of black women have obesity compared with 38% of white women.
-
Bennett et al developed The Shape Program to test a tailored digital health solution aimed at helping black women prevent weight gain.
-
However, whether Shape is cost-effective remains unknown; that is the focus of this analysis.
-
In this study, we present the costs and cost-effectiveness of Shape relative to usual care (UC) in terms of cost per QALY gained and compare this value to established benchmarks for cost-effectiveness.
Q4 - Health economic analysis plan(show question description)
Explanation: The manuscript does not mention the development of a specific health economic analysis plan, nor does it state where such a plan is available.
Quotes:
-
In the Methods section, the manuscript describes the cost and cost-effectiveness analysis methods employed but does not mention a distinct health economic analysis plan.
Q5 - Study population(show question description)
Explanation: The characteristics of the study population are described in detail in the manuscript. The study specifically involves black women who are primary care patients, aged 25 to 44 years, and have a body mass index (BMI) in the overweight or class 1 obese categories. Additional clinical and demographic inclusion and exclusion criteria are provided, such as language fluency and recent health events.
Quotes:
-
The Shape Program (Shape) was designed to prevent weight gain in black female primary care patients whose body mass index (BMI) placed them in either the overweight (25 to 29.9 kg/m2) or class 1 obese (30 to 34.9 kg/m2) categories...
-
Shape's effectiveness relative to a light touch UC intervention was tested among 194 overweight and class 1 obese black women aged 25 to 44 years in a 2-arm parallel-group randomized controlled trial over 12 months followed by a 6-month follow-up period.
-
Additional inclusion criteria were having visited a member in the health center in the past 24 months, being a state resident, and being fluent in English. Participants were excluded if they were pregnant, up to 12 months postpartum, had a myocardial infarction or stroke in the past 2 years, or had any history of cognitive, developmental, or psychiatric disorders.
Q6 - Setting and location(show question description)
Explanation: The manuscript explicitly provides contextual information about the setting and target demographic that could influence the study findings. It identifies black women in low-income communities as the primary focus group, a community disproportionately affected by obesity, and outlines the program delivery through a nonprofit community health center network.
Quotes:
-
The Shape Program (Shape) was designed to prevent weight gain in black female primary care patients whose body mass index (BMI) placed them in either the overweight or class 1 obese categories. Shape sought to promote the modification of obesogenic lifestyle behaviors...
-
This program was delivered to black women in a low-income rural community health center setting.
-
Although long-term studies are needed to confirm this result, this study suggests that Shape is likely to be a cost-effective intervention to prevent weight gain... among high-risk black women in low-income rural communities.
Q7 - Comparators(show question description)
Explanation: The interventions being compared are clearly described, with the Shape program outlined in detail and compared against usual care. The rationale for selecting Shape focuses on addressing obesity prevention in a demographic less responsive to weight loss interventions, with cultural considerations highlighted.
Quotes:
-
The aim of this study was to evaluate the costs and cost-effectiveness of a digital weight gain prevention intervention (Shape) for black women.
-
Shape consisted of adaptive telephone-based coaching by health system personnel, a tailored skills training curriculum, and patient self-monitoring delivered via a fully automated interactive voice response system.
-
In the trial, UC consisted of the Aim for a Healthy Weight brochure and semiannual newsletters on health topics not related to weight.
-
Therefore, delivering interventions that seek to prevent weight gain, as opposed to promoting weight loss, might be a more successful treatment strategy.
-
Weight gain prevention strategies align with sociocultural norms among black communities that are tolerant of higher body weights.
Q8 - Perspective(show question description)
Explanation: The study adopted a payer perspective to evaluate the costs and cost-effectiveness of the Shape intervention, as described in the Methods section. This perspective was chosen because the analysis aimed to understand the value of the intervention from the viewpoint of third-party payers who might bear the cost of implementation.
Quotes:
-
"A cost and cost-effectiveness analysis based on a randomized clinical trial of the Shape intervention was conducted from the payer perspective."
-
"The cost-effectiveness analysis, which consisted of quantifying the incremental costs and QALYs of Shape relative to UC, was conducted from the third-party payer perspective."
Q9 - Time horizon(show question description)
Explanation: The study has a time horizon of 5 years, which is deemed appropriate to assess the linear decay of quality of life benefits over time following the one-year intervention period. This timeframe allows for an evaluation of both the immediate and residual effects of the intervention on preventing weight gain and maintaining quality of life changes.
Quotes:
-
In the base case, we used estimates of QoL change from baseline to each of 6 months, 12 months, and 18 months, and then assumed QoL benefits decay linearly until the end of the fifth year postcessation of the intervention, at which time we assume no further benefits.
-
In our base case, we estimated the incremental cost-effectiveness of Shape per QALY gained to be US $55,264, slightly higher than the often-quoted threshold of US $50,000 per QALY.
Q10 - Discount rate(show question description)
Explanation: The manuscript states that a 3.5% per annum discount rate was applied to all post-trial QALY estimates. This indicates the rate at which future QALY values were discounted to account for time preference and uncertainty in long-term benefits.
Quotes:
-
"All post-trial QALY estimates were discounted at 3.5% per annum."
Q11 - Selection of outcomes(show question description)
Explanation: The outcomes used as measures of benefit and harm in the trial were quality-adjusted life years (QALYs). This is evident from the manuscript, which describes the primary outcome as the incremental cost per QALY gained.
Quotes:
-
Effectiveness was measured in quality-adjusted life years (QALYs). The primary outcome was the incremental cost per QALY of Shape relative to usual care.
-
The cost-effectiveness analysis, which consisted of quantifying the incremental costs and QALYs of Shape relative to UC, was conducted from the third-party payer perspective.
Q12 - Measurement of outcomes(show question description)
Explanation: The outcomes used to capture benefits and harms were clearly measured using quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) and changes in quality of life (QoL), derived from weight change data over the course of the intervention.
Quotes:
-
Effectiveness was measured in quality-adjusted life years (QALYs).
-
The primary outcome was the incremental cost per QALY of Shape relative to usual care.
-
We converted the weight change into a health-related quality of life (QoL) change score over this time period.
Q13 - Valuation of outcomes(show question description)
Explanation: The manuscript provides specific details about the population and methods used to measure and value the outcomes, focusing on black women with a BMI placing them in overweight or class 1 obese categories. The outcome effectiveness was measured in terms of quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) based on weight change transformed into a health-related quality of life (QoL) change score.
Quotes:
-
Shape's effectiveness relative to a light touch UC intervention was tested among 194 overweight and class 1 obese black women aged 25 to 44 years in a 2-arm parallel-group randomized controlled trial.
-
Effectiveness was measured in quality-adjusted life years (QALYs).
-
The primary measure of effectiveness in the trial was weight change from baseline to 12 months. We converted the weight change into a health-related quality of life (QoL) change score over this time period.
Q14 - Measurement and valuation of resources and costs(show question description)
Explanation: The manuscript provides details about how costs were valued, describing the activity-based costing method employed to link resource consumption to specific program components and inflating all costs to 2018 US dollars using the consumer price index.
Quotes:
-
To estimate the incremental costs of Shape, we employed an activity-based costing method that links program resource consumption to specific program components.
-
All costs were inflated to 2018 US dollars using the medical portion of the seasonally adjusted US consumer price index.
Q15 - Currency, price, date, and conversion(show question description)
Explanation: The manuscript provides the dates and the currency used for estimating the resource quantities and unit costs. It clearly states that all costs were adjusted to 2018 US dollars for the analysis.
Quotes:
-
All costs were inflated to 2018 US dollars using the medical portion of the seasonally adjusted US consumer price index.
-
The total cost of Shape was US $758 per participant in 2018 US dollars (Table 1) for the 1-year intervention.
Q16 - Rationale and description of model(show question description)
Explanation: The manuscript describes the use of a cost-effectiveness model for the Shape intervention but does not provide detailed information about the specifics of the model or the rationale for its use. Additionally, it does not state whether the model is publicly available or where it can be accessed.
Quotes:
-
The methods described in this section and reporting of results throughout the paper are consistent with the Consolidated Health Economic Evaluation Reporting Standards.
-
The cost-effectiveness analysis, which consisted of quantifying the incremental costs and QALYs of Shape relative to UC, was conducted from the third-party payer perspective.
Q17 - Analytics and assumptions(show question description)
Explanation: The manuscript outlines the methods used for analyzing data, transforming data into quality-adjusted life years (QALYs), and validating models, such as regression-based imputation of quality of life changes, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) computations, sensitivity analyses, and probabilistic sensitivity analyses.
Quotes:
-
This imputation followed the regression approach described in Finkelstein and Kruger using data from Finkelstein et al and restricting it to a sample of women with a BMI between 25 and 35.
-
We assessed the sensitivity of our ICER to changes in key inputs using 1-way sensitivity analyses.
-
In addition, we conducted 10,000 simulations of the model to quantify the probability that the intervention is cost-effective for a range of willingness-to-pay thresholds that decision makers might consider.
Q18 - Characterizing heterogeneity(show question description)
Explanation: The manuscript does not describe any specific methods used to estimate how the results vary for different sub-groups. It primarily focuses on the overall cost and cost-effectiveness of the Shape intervention without mentioning subgroup analysis or different subgroup evaluations.
Quotes:
-
"A cost-effectiveness analysis based on a randomized clinical trial of the Shape intervention was conducted from the payer perspective."
-
"The cost-effectiveness analysis, which consisted of quantifying the incremental costs and QALYs of Shape relative to UC, was conducted from the third-party payer perspective."
-
"In addition, we conducted 10,000 simulations of the model to quantify the probability that the intervention is cost-effective for a range of willingness-to-pay thresholds that decision makers might consider."
Q19 - Characterizing distributional effects(show question description)
Explanation: The manuscript discusses the focus on black women, reflecting an adjustment to address an identified high-risk priority population. This tailored focus aims to mitigate obesity, a prevalent issue in this demographic, by considering cultural norms and intervention receptiveness specific to this group.
Quotes:
-
The aim of this study was to evaluate the costs and cost-effectiveness of a digital weight gain prevention intervention (Shape) for black women.
-
Weight gain prevention strategies align with sociocultural norms among black communities that are tolerant of higher body weights.
-
The Shape Program (Shape) was designed to prevent weight gain in black female primary care patients whose body mass index (BMI) placed them in either the overweight (25 to 29.9 kg/m2) or class 1 obese (30 to 34.9 kg/m2) categories.
Q20 - Characterizing uncertainty(show question description)
Explanation: The manuscript discusses various methods used to assess the sources of uncertainty in the cost-effectiveness analysis of the Shape intervention. Key methods included one-way sensitivity analyses to evaluate the impact of varying key inputs such as costs and effectiveness, as well as probabilistic sensitivity analyses involving simulations to quantify the probability of cost-effectiveness across different willingness-to-pay thresholds.
Quotes:
-
We assessed the sensitivity of our ICER to changes in key inputs using 1-way sensitivity analyses.
-
Probabilistic Sensitivity Analyses: In addition, we conducted 10,000 simulations of the model to quantify the probability that the intervention is cost-effective for a range of willingness-to-pay thresholds that decision makers might consider.
Q21 - Approach to engagement with patients and others affected by the study(show question description)
Explanation: The manuscript does not mention any engagement of patients, service recipients, the general public, communities, or stakeholders in the design phase of the study.
Quotes:
-
The Shape Program (Shape) was designed to prevent weight gain in black female primary care patients.
-
Bennett et al developed The Shape Program to test a tailored digital health solution aimed at helping black women prevent weight gain. Results reveal Shape's effectiveness in preventing weight gain among black women.
Q22 - Study parameters(show question description)
Explanation: The manuscript reports various analytic inputs and study parameters, including costs, QoL estimates, and assumptions about the duration of benefits. It discusses sensitivity analyses to explore ranges of costs and effectiveness, indicating consideration of uncertainty.
Quotes:
-
Costs included those of delivering the program to 91 intervention participants in the trial and were summarized by program elements: self-monitoring, skills training, coaching, and administration.
-
All post-trial QALY estimates were discounted at 3.5% per annum.
-
Probabilistic sensitivity analyses suggest an ICER below US $50,000 per QALY and US $100,000 per QALY in 39% and 98% of simulations, respectively.
-
We assessed the sensitivity of our ICER to changes in key inputs using 1-way sensitivity analyses.
-
Sensitivity analyses suggested that the ICER was highly sensitive to the duration over which benefits persist.
Q23 - Summary of main results(show question description)
Explanation: The manuscript reports both the mean values for the main categories of costs and outcomes, and these were summarized using an appropriate overall measure, which is the incremental cost per QALY. Costs for program elements like self-monitoring, skills training, coaching, and administration are detailed, and effectiveness is reported in terms of QALYs.
Quotes:
-
"Costs included those of delivering the program to 91 intervention participants in the trial and were summarized by program elements: self-monitoring, skills training, coaching, and administration."
-
"Effectiveness was measured in quality-adjusted life years (QALYs). The primary outcome was the incremental cost per QALY of Shape relative to usual care."
Q24 - Effect of uncertainty(show question description)
Explanation: Uncertainty in inputs and projections affected the findings as indicated by sensitivity and probabilistic analyses. The study reported on the sensitivity of the ICER to the choice of time horizon for decay of intervention benefits and the sensitivity analyses considered different durations for these benefits. The article did not specifically mention varying the discount rate, but it addressed the effect of different benefit durations on cost-effectiveness.
Quotes:
-
The base-case model in which quality of life benefits decay linearly to zero 5 years post intervention cessation, generated an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) of US $55,264 per QALY.
-
Results are highly sensitive to durability of benefits, rising to US $165,730 if benefits end 6 months post intervention.
-
All post-trial QALY estimates were discounted at 3.5% per annum.
Q25 - Effect of engagement with patients and others affected by the study(show question description)
Explanation: The manuscript does not mention any involvement or impact of patients, service recipients, the general public, community, or other stakeholders on the study's approach or findings. The focus is instead on the intervention and its cost-effectiveness analysis.
Quotes:
-
The aim of this study was to evaluate the costs and cost-effectiveness of a digital weight gain prevention intervention (Shape) for black women.
-
In this study, we present the costs and cost-effectiveness of Shape relative to usual care (UC) in terms of cost per QALY gained and compare this value to established benchmarks for cost-effectiveness.
Q26 - Study findings, limitations, generalizability, and current knowledge(show questiondescription)
Explanation: The manuscript reports on the key findings, limitations, and potential impact on policy or practice of the Shape intervention. It discusses cost-effectiveness, acknowledges key limitations, and considers the broader use of the intervention in health policy and community settings.
Quotes:
-
Conclusions: Although long-term studies are needed to confirm this result, this study suggests that Shape is likely to be a cost-effective intervention to prevent weight gain and reduce risks for chronic disease among high-risk black women in low-income rural communities.
-
Limitations: Although this study has many strengths, we identified 5 key limitations in this study.
-
Discussion: This study presents the first evidence that a digital weight management program can be a cost-effective solution for preventing weight gain.
-
Conflicts of Interest: GGB holds equity in Coeus Health and serves on the scientific advisory boards of WW International...These organizations had no role in study design, data collection, data analysis and interpretation of data, in the writing of the report, or in the decision to submit the article for publication.
SECTION: TITLE
A Digital Behavioral Weight Gain Prevention Intervention in Primary Care Practice: Cost and Cost-Effectiveness Analysis
SECTION: ABSTRACT
Background
Obesity is one of the largest drivers of health care spending but nearly half of the population with obesity demonstrate suboptimal readiness for weight loss treatment. Black women are disproportionately likely to have both obesity and limited weight loss readiness. However, they have been shown to be receptive to strategies that prevent weight gain.
Objective
The aim of this study was to evaluate the costs and cost-effectiveness of a digital weight gain prevention intervention (Shape) for black women.The aim of this study was to evaluate the costs and cost-effectiveness of a digital weight gain prevention intervention (Shape) for black women. Shape consisted of adaptive telephone-based coaching by health system personnel, a tailored skills training curriculum, and patient self-monitoring delivered via a fully automated interactive voice response system.
Methods
A cost and cost-effectiveness analysis based on a randomized clinical trial of the Shape intervention was conducted from the payer perspective.and cost-effectiveness analysis based on a randomized clinical trial of the Shape intervention was conducted from the payer perspective. Costs included those of delivering the program to 91 intervention participants in the trial and were summarized by program elements: self-monitoring, skills training, coaching, and administration.Costs included those of delivering the program to 91 intervention participants in the trial and were summarized by program elements: self-monitoring, skills training, coaching, and administration. Effectiveness was measured in quality-adjusted life years (QALYs). The primary outcome was the incremental cost per QALY of Shape relative to usual care.Effectiveness was measured in quality-adjusted life years (QALYs). The primary outcome was the incremental cost per QALY of Shape relative to usual care.Effectiveness was measured in quality-adjusted life years (QALYs). The primary outcome was the incremental cost per QALY of Shape relative to usual care.
Results
Shape cost an average of US $758 per participant. The base-case model in which quality of life benefits decay linearly to zero 5 years post intervention cessation, generated an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) of US $55,264 per QALY. Probabilistic sensitivity analyses suggest an ICER below US $50,000 per QALY and US $100,000 per QALY in 39% and 98% of simulations, respectively. Results are highly sensitive to durability of benefits, rising to US $165,730 if benefits end 6 months post intervention.
Conclusions
Results suggest that the Shape intervention is cost-effective based on established benchmarks, indicating that it can be a part of a successful strategy to address the nation's growing obesity epidemic in low-income at-risk communities.
SECTION: INTRO
Introduction
Excess weight is estimated to account for 9% of total annual health care costs, with roughly half paid by public sector health programs. Nationally, almost 55% of black women have obesity compared with 38% of white women. As a result, black women are at greater risk for obesity-related chronic diseases, including stroke, coronary heart disease, and depression, and attributable costs. As a result, interventions that successfully address excess weight in this at-risk group may confer significant health and economic benefits to individuals and society. However, reducing risk factors in this group is a challenge because, relative to other populations, black women express less interest in or readiness for weight loss treatment. Moreover, weight loss interventions have shown consistently smaller weight loss among black women relative to their white counterparts. Therefore, delivering interventions that seek to prevent weight gain, as opposed to promoting weight loss, might be a more successful treatment strategy.
Weight gain prevention strategies align with sociocultural norms among black communities that are tolerant of higher body weights. Previous digital weight gain prevention interventions have shown moderate success in reducing weight gain among children and young adults with overweight, but no studies had studied their effectiveness among black women. Bennett et al developed The Shape Program to test a tailored digital health solution aimed at helping black women prevent weight gain. Results reveal Shape's effectiveness in preventing weight gain among black women. However, whether Shape is cost-effective remains unknown; that is the focus of this analysis.
A cost-effectiveness analysis is one strategy for understanding whether the benefits of an intervention are worth the costs. Many public sector agencies, such as the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence in the United Kingdom and the Health Intervention and Technology Assessment Program in Thailand, require cost-effectiveness analyses before considering a subsidy decision for a health intervention. Although the United States does not systematically require cost-effectiveness analyses, they have gained popularity as a tool to compare the value of diverse interventions. Guidelines recommend that cost-effectiveness analyses report benefits in terms of a common metric such as the quality-adjusted life year (QALY), which consolidates diverse health benefits to facilitate comparisons of value among interventions targeting diverse population health gaps. In this study, we present the costs and cost-effectiveness of Shape relative to usual care (UC) in terms of cost per QALY gained and compare this value to established benchmarks for cost-effectiveness. Given the risk of steady weight gain in the target population, third-party payers may be interested in knowing whether a successful weight gain prevention program, such as Shape, represents good use of scarce health care resources.
SECTION: METHODS
Methods
The Shape Program
The Shape Program (Shape) was designed to prevent weight gain in black female primary care patientsThe Shape Program (Shape) was designed to prevent weight gain in black female primary care patients whose body mass index (BMI) placed them in either the overweight (25 to 29.9 kg/m2) or class 1 obese (30 to 34.9 kg/m2) categories. Shape sought to promote the modification of obesogenic lifestyle behaviors (diet, physical activity, and leisure time activities). It leveraged key technological innovations to support personnel within a private, nonprofit community health center network. In doing so, the program was able to augment the capacity of existing health systems to reach patients who otherwise would receive little or no weight management counseling. The Shape program included adaptive telephone-based coaching by health system personnel, personalized obesogenic behavior change goals assigned every 2 months, a tailored skills training curriculum, patient self-monitoring delivered via a fully automated interactive voice response system, 12 counseling calls with a registered dietitian, and a 12-month gym membership.
Shape's effectiveness relative to a light touch UC intervention was tested among 194 overweight and class 1 obese black women aged 25 to 44 years in a 2-arm parallel-group randomized controlled trial over 12 months followed by a 6-month follow-up period (ClinicalTrials.gov reference: NCT00938535). Additional inclusion criteria were having visited a member in the health center in the past 24 months, being a state resident, and being fluent in English. Participants were excluded if they were pregnant, up to 12 months postpartum, had a myocardial infarction or stroke in the past 2 years, or had any history of cognitive, developmental, or psychiatric disorders. In the trial, UC consisted of the Aim for a Healthy Weight brochure and semiannual newsletters on health topics not related to weight. Intent-to-treat analyses included outcome measurements for 91 participants randomized to receive the intervention and 94 UC participants. At 12 and 18 months, Shape participants had lower weight gain than UC participants (mean difference of -1.4 kg and -1.7 kg at 12 and 18 months, respectively).
Cost Analysis
To estimate the incremental costs of Shape, we employed an activity-based costing method that links program resource consumption to specific program components. This approach allows evaluators to map the resource flow of the program. Electronic budgetary records, staff interviews, and engagement data were utilized to estimate program costs. All costs were inflated to 2018 US dollars using the medical portion of the seasonally adjusted US consumer price index.
Cost-Effectiveness Analysis
The cost-effectiveness analysis, which consisted of quantifying the incremental costs and QALYs of Shape relative to UC, was conducted from the third-party payer perspective.The cost-effectiveness analysis, which consisted of quantifying the incremental costs and QALYs of Shape relative to UC, was conducted from the third-party payer perspective.
Incremental Cost
As virtually no costs were incurred in the usual-care arm, the incremental cost is set equal to the cost of program delivery of the Shape intervention (including self-monitoring, skills training, coaching, and administration costs). This excluded program development costs, as these represent sunk costs that would not need to be repeated if the program were more broadly adopted. The average per capita cost of program delivery was assigned to the 91 participants who received the intervention and were included in the intent-to-treat analysis.
Incremental Effectiveness
The primary measure of effectiveness in the trial was weight change from baseline to 12 months. We converted the weight change into a health-related quality of life (QoL) change score over this time period. This imputation followed the regression approach described in Finkelstein and Kruger using data from Finkelstein et al and restricting it to a sample of women with a BMI between 25 and 35. This age and gender restriction allowed for obtaining estimates in a subsample that best approximates the characteristics of the Shape study population. Using this restricted sample, we estimated the association between QoL change and weight change (in kilograms) while controlling for baseline BMI and age via the following equation:
Using a process of step-wise regression, iteratively dropping variables found not to be statistically significant at the 5% significance level, we identified the following relationship:
We used this equation to impute a QoL change for each individual in the Shape trial.
Cost-Effectiveness Analysis
As with the primary analysis, the cost-effectiveness analysis was based on the intention-to-treat sample, with missing observations in both trial arms treated as missing at random. The numerator of the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) is the incremental cost to deliver Shape. The denominator is the mean discounted QALYs gained by intervention participants minus mean discounted QALYs gained by the UC group. QALY estimates for each arm were generated by plotting a curve of DeltaQoL against time from baseline and taking the area under this curve. All post-trial QALY estimates were discounted at 3.5% per annum.All post-trial QALY estimates were discounted at 3.5% per annum.
In the base case, we used estimates of QoL change from baseline to each of 6 months, 12 months, and 18 months, and then assumed QoL benefits decay linearly until the end of the fifth year postcessation of the intervention, at which time we assume no further benefits.
Sensitivity Analyses
We assessed the sensitivity of our ICER to changes in key inputs using 1-way sensitivity analyses.We assessed the sensitivity of our ICER to changes in key inputs using 1-way sensitivity analyses. We estimated the effect of the following changes on the ICER: (1) halving the cost of the intervention; (2) doubling and halving the costs incurred in each cost category; (3) doubling or halving the incremental effectiveness of the intervention with regard to UC; and (4) varying the duration of residual benefits post cessation from 5 years in the base case to 0.5 and 3 years.
Probabilistic Sensitivity Analyses
In addition, we conducted 10,000 simulations of the model to quantify the probability that the intervention is cost-effective for a range of willingness-to-pay thresholds that decision makers might consider.In addition, we conducted 10,000 simulations of the model to quantify the probability that the intervention is cost-effective for a range of willingness-to-pay thresholds that decision makers might consider. Cost was assumed to follow a gamma distribution, with an SD of 25% of mean costs; effectiveness was assumed to follow a normal distribution, with SDs equal to the SEs of effectiveness estimates.
The methods described in this section and reporting of results throughout the paper are consistent with the Consolidated Health Economic Evaluation Reporting Standards.
SECTION: RESULTS
Results
Program Costs
The total cost of Shape was US $758 per participant in 2018 US dollars (Table 1) for the 1-year intervention. Program costs were allocated to 4 areas, including administration, self-monitoring, skills training, and counseling (Table 1). Administration costs, including personnel, costs of support staff training, and space and other overheads were the greatest consumer of program resources at an average cost of US $387 per participant. Telephone counseling costs were the second highest cost driver, driven largely by registered dietitians' personnel costs and cell phone plan subscriptions, at an average of US $149 per participant. Interactive self-monitoring included server and interactive voice response system maintenance costs and purchasing of pedometers and scales and cost an average of US $126 per participant. Tailored skills training costs US $95 per participant, primarily driven by the cost of printing training materials and providing kit bags to participants. Training the coaches front-loaded many of the costs in the first 2 years of Shape. Specifically, the average program costs in years 1 and 2 (US $17,401) were 53% higher than the average costs in years 3 to 5 (US $11,380).
The variability in Shape coaching costs in years 1 and 2 was further explored. Shape coaches placed 3968 calls to participants (an average of 44 calls per participant during the yearlong program). The majority of these calls (3316/3968, 83.6%) were attempts to reach participants to deliver coaching content, while 16.4% (652/3968) were considered successful coaching calls in which the curriculum was delivered in full. These successful calls were on average 21.2 min long (SD 10.1 min). The average amount of time that coaches spent on unsuccessful calls per participant was 27.6 min (SD 19.2 min) for the whole program period.
SECTION: TABLE
Program delivery costs for 91 participants by program area and year (all figures in 2018 US $).
Program area Year 1 (US $) Year 2 (US $) Year 3 (US $) Year 4 (US $) Year 5 (US $) Total (US $) Cost per participanta (US $) Cost as percentage of totalb Interactive self-monitoring 7123 1140 1102 1068 1047 11,481 126 17% Tailored skills training 1785 4585 2161 132 0 8662 95 13% Telephone counseling 1877 3417 3301 3199 1794 13,588 149 20% Administration 7665 7210 6967 6750 6619 35,212 387 51% Total 18,450 16,352 13,531 11,148 9461 68,942 758 100%
aCalculated for a total of 91 intervention participants.
bTotal does not sum to 100% due to rounding.
SECTION: RESULTS
Cost-Effectiveness Analysis
Incremental Cost
As virtually no cost was incurred in the UC arm, the incremental cost of Shape relative to UC was US $758 in the base case.
Effectiveness
As reported in Bennett et al, mean difference in weight change of the intervention and UC arms with regard to baseline approached statistical significance at 6 months (-1.1 kg [95% CI -2.3 to 0.04]), and was statistically significant at the 12-month (-1.4 kg [-2.8 to -0.1]) and 18-month (-1.7 kg [-3.3 to -0.2]) assessments. The difference in weight change across arms was transformed to QoL change scores for Shape participants and UC participants at 6 months (+0.009 and +0.006, respectively), 12 months (+0.009 and +0.005, respectively), and 18 months (+0.009 and +0.004, respectively) from baseline. Figure 1 presents the graph of QoL change against time from baseline.
SECTION: FIG
Estimated quality of life (QoL) change score plotted against time from baseline. The difference in area under the Shape curve and the Usual Care curve (ie, dark shaded region) represents the mean gain in quality-adjusted life years per participant in the base case analysis.
SECTION: RESULTS
Base-Case Incremental Cost-Effectiveness Ratio
In the base case of a 1-year intervention followed by 5 years of linear decay of post-trial weight gain prevention benefits, we estimated an ICER of US $55,264 per QALY gained.
Sensitivity Analyses
One-way sensitivity analyses showed that halving incremental QALYs of the intervention arm with regard to UC raised the ICER to US $110,529 per QALY, whereas doubling incremental QALYs or halving incremental costs decreased the ICER to US $27,632 per QALY. When each Shape cost category was doubled or halved separately, the ICER ranged from US $41,130 to US $83,447 (administration costs); US $49,792 to US $66,122 (telephone counseling costs); US $51,766 to US $62,176 (tailored skills training costs); and US $50,637 to US $64,434 (interactive self-monitoring costs). With QoL benefits modeled to decay to zero within 3 years of cessation of the intervention, the ICER was US $77,644; with benefits ceasing 6 months after the intervention concluded, the ICER rose to US $165,730. Figure 2 presents a tornado diagram showing the results of the one-way sensitivity analyses.
Probabilistic Sensitivity Analyses
Figure 3 displays the cost-effectiveness acceptability curve. The figure reveals that 39.3% of simulations suggest that the incremental cost per QALY of Shape relative to UC is less than US $50,000, an oft-cited threshold for cost-effectiveness. At a willingness to pay of US $100,000 per QALY (another commonly cited threshold), 98.3% of simulations suggested that Shape is cost-effective.
SECTION: FIG
Results of one-way sensitivity analyses varying key parameters (incremental QALYs, incremental and category-specific costs, and duration of post-cessation benefits). ICER: incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; QALYs: quality-adjusted life years.
Cost-effectiveness acceptability curve compared against 2 potential cost-effectiveness thresholds.
SECTION: DISCUSS
Discussion
Principal Findings
This study presents the first evidence that a digital weight management program can be a cost-effective solution for preventing weight gain. In our base case, we estimated the incremental cost-effectiveness of Shape per QALY gained to be US $55,264, slightly higher than the often-quoted threshold of US $50,000 per QALY. The reality is that there is no established threshold for cost-effectiveness of health care interventions in the United States; indeed, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act specifically bars the use of a cost-effectiveness measure as a threshold. Despite this, a threshold of US $50,000 per QALY has been widely used in the United States since 1992. In probabilistic sensitivity analyses, 39% of our simulations suggested that Shape has an ICER below this threshold. Some researchers even suggest a more appropriate threshold would be US $100,000 per QALY. Compared against this threshold, 98% of our simulations suggest that Shape is cost-effective. Although there are no other weight gain prevention programs to compare against, Shape's ICER also compares favorably to the majority of the lifestyle and pharmacological interventions targeting weight loss. Moreover, although this study did not quantify cost offsets from slower weight progression, Cawley et al suggest that annual savings from even moderate weight loss (or less weight gain relative to control) far exceed the US $758 annual cost of the program. Moreover, there are several reasons to believe Shape's estimated cost of US $758 is likely to be an upper bound. Costs in years 3 to 5, when the program was recruiting at a much higher rate, were an average of 35% lower than that of the first 2 years (US $11,380 in years 3 to 5 compared with $17,401 in years 1 to 2; Table 1). If one considers only the per participant variable costs of the pedometer, scale, skills training kit bag, and coaching time, with the remaining costs averaged over a very large number of participants, per capita costs could be as low as US $243 (see Multimedia Appendix 1). This suggests that at full scale, Shape may be highly cost-effective. However, it may be that costs would need to be further reduced with no loss in outcomes for Shape to be highly scalable. For example, Weight Watchers OnlinePlus costs only US $160 per year. Shape may need to demonstrate an average cost per participant in this range or better to increase the potential for scalability. This could be accomplished through better use of Shape's data to customize the intervention at the individual level and to intervene early for those most at risk of dropping out. This should be an area of future research.
Limitations
Although this study has many strengths, we identified 5 key limitations in this study. First, there is a lack of evidence on the persistence of weight gain prevention effects post intervention. The existing literature strongly suggests significant weight loss maintenance, and presumably QoL gains, up to 5 years after successful weight loss programs. However, there are no corresponding data for weight gain prevention. We made the assumption that quality-of-life benefits would last 5 years beyond the intervention period and tested the sensitivity of the ICER to this assumption. Sensitivity analyses suggested that the ICER was highly sensitive to the duration over which benefits persist. Studies with longer-term follow-ups of both weight loss and QoL are required to validate our assumption in the context of weight gain prevention programs. Second, owing to data limitations, we were not able to directly assess QoL in participants in this study. Instead, we used an approach similar to that used in other cost-effectiveness studies and assessed the sensitivity of our estimates to uncertainty in the QoL estimates using one-way and probabilistic sensitivity analyses. Analyses suggest that the ICER is moderately sensitive to the relationship between QoL and weight change. Third, estimates of QoL changes are sensitive to the method of elicitation. This is true whether one uses direct elicitation methods, such as standard gamble or time-tradeoff methods, or using patient-reported outcomes measures, such as the data from the SF-12 version 2 instrument used in this study. This fact, combined with our imputation strategy which imputes QoL changes solely from weight change and age, ignoring other potentially important confounders, suggests that there is likely a high degree of error in our QoL estimates, as would be the case in most cost-effectiveness studies. We address this via sensitivity analyses using a wide range of QoL values that we believe capture reasonable lower and upper bounds for these estimates. Fourth, the trial did not measure potential cost offsets from reduced health care utilization that may result from improved participant health outcomes. As a result, cost-effectiveness results presented here may be conservative. Finally, this program was delivered to black women in a low-income rural community health center setting. Although the intervention could be fielded in any setting and to diverse populations, future studies would be needed to see if the results are generalizable. However, long-term studies that follow a cohort of participants over an extended period of time and link their weight loss to changes in health care utilization would be needed to truly confirm the long-term cost-effectiveness of the Shape intervention.
Conclusions
Although long-term studies are needed to confirm this result, this study suggests that Shape is likely to be a cost-effective intervention to prevent weight gain and reduce risks for chronic disease among high-risk black women in low-income rural communities, where obesity rates are also highest. It thus provides an additional strategy that these communities can rely on to effectively and efficiently respond to the nation's growing obesity epidemic.
Conflicts of Interest: GGB holds equity in Coeus Health and serves on the scientific advisory boards of WW International (formerly Weight Watchers International) and Interactive Health. These organizations had no role in study design, data collection, data analysis and interpretation of data, in the writing of the report, or in the decision to submit the article for publication. DS is a consultant with Omada Health. AK, EAF, EL, PF, and SA declare they have no conflicts of interest.
SECTION: ABBR
Abbreviations
BMI
body mass index
ICER
incremental cost-effectiveness ratio
QALY
quality-adjusted life year
QoL
quality of life
UC
usual care