Estimating the Health-Related Quality of Life Benefit of Prophylactic Treatment for COVID-19 in Immunocompromised People: A Multimethod Valuation Study
Katy Gallop, Rebekah Hall, Michael Watt, Daniel Squirrell, Neil Branscombe, Sofie Arnetop, Andrew Lloyd

TL;DR
This study estimates how much better the quality of life could become for immunocompromised people if they use prophylactic treatment for COVID-19, reducing the need for restrictive behaviors.
Contribution
The study introduces a multimethod valuation approach to quantify the health-related quality of life benefits of PrEP for immunocompromised individuals.
Findings
Immunocompromised individuals reported a mean EQ-5D-5L score of 0.574 currently and 0.656 post-PrEP.
75% of immunocompromised individuals would change behaviors with PrEP, and 93% would experience emotional benefits.
General population valuation showed a potential utility gain between 0.082 and 0.326 with PrEP.
Abstract
Background: Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for COVID-19 provides additional protection, beyond vaccines alone, for individuals who are immunocompromised (IC). This may reduce the need for preventative behavioral modification, such as shielding—a behavioral restriction limiting an IC individual to minimize face-to-face interactions and/or crowded places. Therefore, PrEP may improve psychosocial well-being and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) for individuals with IC conditions. Objective: To estimate the potential HRQoL and utility benefit of PrEP for prevention of COVID-19 in individuals with IC conditions who may not have an adequate response of full vaccination (and therefore are at “highest risk” of severe COVID-19) that can be used in future economic evaluations of preventative therapies against COVID-19. Methods: Vignettes describing HRQoL associated with 2 pre-PrEP states…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCOVID-19 and Mental Health · COVID-19 and healthcare impacts · Long-Term Effects of COVID-19
