Handling Uncertainty in Cost-Effectiveness Models
Author: Briggs A.H.
Source: PharmacoEconomics, Volume 17, Number 5, May 2000 , pp. 479-500(22)
Publisher: Adis International
Abstract:
The use of modelling in economic evaluation is widespread, and it most often involves synthesising data from a number of sources. However, even when economic evaluations are conducted alongside clinical trials, some form of modelling is usually essential. The aim of this article is to review the handling of uncertainty in the cost-effectiveness results that are generated by the use of decision-analytic-type modelling. The modelling process is split into a number of stages:
- a set of methods to be employed in a study are defined, which should include a reference case of agreed methods to enhance the comparability of results;
- the clinical and demographic characteristics of the patients the model relates to should be specified as carefully as in any experimental study; and
- the data requirements of the model should be estimated using the principles of Bayesian statistics, such that prior distributions are specified for unknown model parameters.
Keywords: Cost effectiveness; Pharmacoeconomics
Language: English
Document Type: Review article
Affiliations: 1: Health Economics Research Centre, University of Oxford, Oxford, England *
Publication date: 2000-05-01
- In this: publication
- By this: publisher
- In this Subject: Pharmacology
- By this author: Briggs A.H.

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