A cross-over, randomised feasibility study of digitally-printed versus hand-painted artificial eyes in adults (PERSONAL-EYE-S): health economic findings
Sarah Ronaldson, Elizabeth Coleman, Amie Woodward, Tim Zoltie, Paul Bartlett, Laura Wilson, Tom Archer, Jessica Kawalek, Florien Boele, Bernard Chang, George Kalantzis, Michael Theaker, Nabil El-Hindy, Emma Walshaw, Taras Gout, Judith Watson

TL;DR
This study tested whether it's feasible to collect health and cost data for a future large trial comparing hand-painted and digitally-printed artificial eyes in adults.
Contribution
The study provides a framework for collecting health economic data to support a future full-scale RCT on artificial eyes.
Findings
Health outcomes and resource use data were mostly feasible to collect, though resource use questionnaires needed refinement.
Digitally-printed eyes had higher utility scores but required more remake appointments and had higher estimated costs.
A full economic evaluation within a large RCT is considered feasible based on the findings.
Abstract
Technology advances mean alternatives to hand-painted artificial eyes are possible, but the feasibility of conducting a large-scale trial is unknown. The aim was to assess the feasibility of collecting healthcare resource use and associated costs needed to undertake a large-scale randomised controlled trial (RCT) comparing the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of hand-painted artificial eyes with digitally-printed artificial eyes. Participants wore a digitally-printed artificial eye and a hand-painted artificial eye, for two weeks each, in a random order. Individual patient-level data was used to explore health outcomes (EQ-5D-5L) and resource use. Costs of the two artificial eye services were collected. A full economic evaluation was not conducted. An appropriate economic evaluation framework was developed to identify the relevant health economic data necessary for a future full…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOphthalmology and Visual Impairment Studies · Retinopathy of Prematurity Studies · Ocular Disorders and Treatments
