There are many studies where the analytical task is to estimate the total costs over a defined period of time for a treatment group with a particular condition or chronic disease. These include cost of illness studies such as incremental or total lifetime costs for a disease, the components of cost effectiveness, and other forms of economic evaluation in health care. However, answering such questions requires addressing a range of statistical and econometric issues that include variable time periods of observation for individual patients, fluctuating costs over the course of the disease or treatment, the escalation of costs when the patient is dying and administrative censoring of data prior to the endpoint of interest (e.g. cure, death). These analytical obstacles are compounded by skewed cost data and the endogeneity of treatment decisions caused by self-selection into treatment based on expected idiosyncratic benefits, costs and risks of treatments. Our proposal will develop innovative methods to address each of these problems in a consolidated manner. The proposed work will advance four broad areas in the fields of cost analysis and economic evaluation in health studies. First, it will provide and validate a consistent method of estimating costs in a setting characterized by varying rates of spending over time, right censoring, and the escalation of expenditures commonly observed just before death. Second, it will bridge two large literatures on methods, one on modeling skewed cost data (with right censoring) and the other on the use of IV in the presence of treatment heterogeneity. Third, it can highlight the role that unobserved patient preferences and disease severity may have in generating treatment effect heterogeneity in the context of prostate cancer. Lastly, this work has a high likelihood of generating new information about the comparative cost estimates in prostate cancer which can serve as important inputs into cost-effectiveness and other policy analyses.

Public Health Relevance

The proposed work will develop innovative methods that will advance four broad areas in the fields of cost analysis and economic evaluation in health studies. First, it will provide and validate a consistent method of estimating costs in a setting characterized by varying rates of spending over time, right censoring, and the escalation of expenditures commonly observed just before death. Second, it will bridge two large literatures on methods, one on modeling skewed cost data (with right censoring) and the other on the use of IV in the presence of treatment heterogeneity. Third, it can highlight the role that unobserved patient preferences and disease severity may have in generating treatment effect heterogeneity in the context of prostate cancer. Lastly, this work has a high likelihood of generating new information about the comparative cost estimates in prostate cancer which can serve as important inputs into cost-effectiveness and other policy analyses.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01CA155329-03
Application #
8444529
Study Section
Health Services Organization and Delivery Study Section (HSOD)
Program Officer
Yabroff, Robin
Project Start
2011-07-21
Project End
2014-08-31
Budget Start
2013-09-01
Budget End
2014-08-31
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
2013
Total Cost
$415,371
Indirect Cost
$112,861
Name
University of Washington
Department
Administration
Type
Schools of Public Health
DUNS #
605799469
City
Seattle
State
WA
Country
United States
Zip Code
98195
Basu, Anirban; Jones, Andrew M; Dias, Pedro Rosa (2018) Heterogeneity in the impact of type of schooling on adult health and lifestyle. J Health Econ 57:1-14
Terza, Joseph V (2016) Inference Using Sample Means of Parametric Nonlinear Data Transformations. Health Serv Res 51:1109-13
Agapova, Maria; Duignan, Andrea; Smith, Alan et al. (2015) Long-term costs of introducing HPV-DNA post-treatment surveillance to national cervical cancer screening in Ireland. Expert Rev Pharmacoecon Outcomes Res 15:999-1005
Basu, Anirban; Gore, John L (2015) Are Elderly Patients With Clinically Localized Prostate Cancer Overtreated? Exploring Heterogeneity in Survival Effects. Med Care 53:79-86
Basu, Anirban (2015) Welfare implications of learning through solicitation versus diversification in health care. J Health Econ 42:165-73
Basu, Anirban (2014) ESTIMATING PERSON-CENTERED TREATMENT (PeT) EFFECTS USING INSTRUMENTAL VARIABLES: AN APPLICATION TO EVALUATING PROSTATE CANCER TREATMENTS. J Appl Econ (Chichester Engl) 29:671-691
Basu, Anirban; Jena, Anupam B; Goldman, Dana P et al. (2014) Heterogeneity in action: the role of passive personalization in comparative effectiveness research. Health Econ 23:359-73
Basu, Anirban; Chan, Kwun Chuen Gary (2014) Can we make smart choices between OLS and contaminated IV methods? Health Econ 23:462-72
Borah, Bijan J; Basu, Anirban (2013) Highlighting differences between conditional and unconditional quantile regression approaches through an application to assess medication adherence. Health Econ 22:1052-70
Basu, Anirban; Meltzer, Herbert Y (2012) Tying comparative effectiveness information to decision-making and the future of comparative effectiveness research designs: the case for antipsychotic drugs. J Comp Eff Res 1:171-80

Showing the most recent 10 out of 13 publications