posted on 2025-11-24, 21:57authored byAngela Burge, Anne Holland, Christine F McDonald, Michael J Abramson, Catherine J Hill, Annemarie L Lee, Narelle Cox, Rosemary Moore, Caroline Nicolson, Paul O'HalloranPaul O'Halloran, Aroub Lahham, Rebecca GilliesRebecca Gillies, Ajay Mahal
<p dir="ltr">Background and objective: This study aimed to compare the cost-effectiveness and cost-utility of home and centre-based pulmonary rehabilitation for adults with stable chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). </p><p dir="ltr">Methods: Prospective economic analyses were undertaken from a health system perspective alongside a randomized controlled equivalence trial in which participants referred to pulmonary rehabilitation undertook a standard 8-week outpatient centre-based or a new home-based programme. Participants underwent clinical assessment prior to programme commencement, immediately following completion and 12 months following programme completion. They provided data for utility (quality-adjusted life years (QALY) determined using SF6D (utility scores for health states) calculated from 36-Item Short Form Health Survey version 2) and effectiveness (change in distance walked on 6-min walk test (Δ6MWD) following pulmonary rehabilitation). Individual-level cost data for the 12 months following programme completion was sourced from healthcare administration and government databases. </p><p dir="ltr">Results: Between-group mean difference point estimates for cost (−$4497 (95% CI: −$12 250 to $3257), utility (0.025 (−0.038 to 0.086) QALY) and effectiveness (14 m (−11 to 39) Δ6MWD) favoured the home-based group. Cost-utility analyses demonstrated 63% of estimates falling in the dominant southeast quadrant and the probability that the new home-based model was cost-effective at a $0 threshold for willingness to pay was 78%. Results were robust to a range of sensitivity analyses. Programme completion was associated with significantly lower healthcare costs in the following 12 months. </p><p dir="ltr">Conclusion: Home-based pulmonary rehabilitation provides a cost-effective alternative model for people with COPD who cannot access traditional centre-based programmes.</p>
Funding
This study was funded by a National Health and Medical Research Council (Australia) project grant (#1046353).