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. 2024 Jun 16;14(6):e085084. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2024-085084

Table 5.

Estimates of the mean incremental cost, incremental effect (QALY gain or OR) and cost-effectiveness of craniotomy compared with DC in the base case and two sensitivity analyses (based on imputed data)

Cost-utility analysis Incremental cost (95% CI) (N=126) QALY gain (95% CI) (N=122) ICER CEAC*
Base-case: imputed −£5520 (−£18 060 to £7020) 0.093 (0.029 to 0.156) Dominant 87%
SA wider cost perspective −£17 793 (−34 658 to −928) 0.094 (0.030 to 0.159) Dominant 99%
SA lowest EQ-5D-5L baseline score −£5445 (−£17 547 to £6658) 0.089 (0.025 to 0.152) Dominant 87%
Cost-effectiveness analysis Incremental cost (95% CI) OR (95% CI)† ICER
Base case −£4536 (−£17 374 to £8301) 1.682 (0.995 to 2.842) Dominant
SA wider cost perspective −£16 900 (−£33 807 to £7) 1.693 (0.998 to 2.871) Dominant

*Probability of being cost-effective on the CEAC at a threshold of £20 000 per QALY.

†For a favourable outcome for craniotomy compared with DC, based on the Extended Glasgow Outcome Scale, as described in the Methods section.

CEAC, cost-effectiveness acceptability curve; 95% CI, 95% confidence interval; DC, decompressive craniectomy; Dominant, lower mean costs and higher mean effect; EQ-5D-5L, EuroQoL 5-Dimension 5-Level; ICER, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; N, number allocated to that trial arm and included in the analysis – imputation was undertaken as part of all presented analyses; QALY, quality-adjusted life-years; SA, sensitivity analysis.