Cost-effectiveness of tuberculosis infection screening and treatment among high-tuberculosis risk immigrants and asylum seekers in The Netherlands: A cohort modelling study

Background: We evaluated the cost-effectiveness of TB infection (TBI) screening and TB preventive treatment (TPT) for immigrants, asylum seekers, and settled migrants in The Netherlands. Methods: We used a deterministic cohort model that captures the natural history of TBI and TB disease for a migra...

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Main Authors: Jan A.C. Hontelez, Ineke T. Spruijt, Roel Bakker, Frank Cobelens, Connie Erkens, Susan van den Hof, Sake J. de Vlas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2025-10-01
Series:Journal of Infection and Public Health
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Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1876034125002382
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Summary:Background: We evaluated the cost-effectiveness of TB infection (TBI) screening and TB preventive treatment (TPT) for immigrants, asylum seekers, and settled migrants in The Netherlands. Methods: We used a deterministic cohort model that captures the natural history of TBI and TB disease for a migrant cohort in the country of origin (pre-entry) and in The Netherlands (post-entry). We fitted the pre-entry force of infection to Interferon Gamma Release Assay (IGRA) positivity rates from an implementation pilot study, and chest X-ray (CXR) positivity from the national entry-screening programme. We compared the costs per quality adjusted life year (QALY) gained for TBI screening with CXR screening over a 20-year time-horizon, accounting for parameter uncertainty by producing predictions for over 1000 unique parameter combinations that fit the data. Results: TBI screening uniformly resulted in an increase in QALYs gained compared to current CXR-based screening policies. For immigrants, <10 % of parameter combinations predicted TBI entry screening to be more cost-effective than CXR screening under observed TPT completion rates (36 %). However, this changed to nearly 100 % of parameter combinations for immigrants coming from countries with a TB incidence of ≥100 per 100,000 when applying TPT completion rates as observed in asylum seekers (72 %). For asylum seekers, 100 % of parameter combinations predicted cost-effectiveness, while 0 % predicted TBI screening to be cost-effective among settled migrants. Conclusions: TBI entry screening is a cost-effective alternative to CXR entry screening for immigrants and asylum seekers coming from high TB endemic countries, provided TPT completion is sufficiently high.
ISSN:1876-0341