# Cost-effectiveness of dialectical behavioural therapy versus treatment as usual for autism with suicidal behaviours: single-blind randomised controlled trial

**Authors:** Anne Huntjens, Filip Smit, L. M. C. van den Bosch, Ad Kerkhof, Bram Sizoo, Mark van der Gaag

PMC · DOI: 10.1007/s10198-025-01794-3 · The European Journal of Health Economics · 2025-05-31

## TL;DR

This study found that dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) is more cost-effective than usual treatment for autistic adults with suicidal behaviors, improving quality of life and reducing costs.

## Contribution

DBT is shown to be a novel, cost-effective treatment for autistic adults with suicidality, filling a significant treatment gap.

## Key findings

- DBT cost €371 less than treatment as usual (TAU) from a healthcare perspective while gaining 0.184 additional quality-adjusted life years (QALYs).
- DBT showed better treatment response rates with reduced suicidal ideation and was cost-effective from a societal perspective at €232 per QALY gained.
- Sensitivity analyses confirmed DBT's cost-effectiveness and better outcomes compared to TAU.

## Abstract

This study evaluated the cost-effectiveness of dialectical behaviour therapy (DBT) compared to treatment as usual (TAU) for autistic adults with suicidal behaviours.

In a randomised controlled trial, 123 autistic outpatients were assessed over 12 months. Healthcare costs and societal costs were calculated in accordance with the Dutch standard. Outcomes were quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) and treatment response, defined as a reduction of at least 50% in symptoms of suicidal ideation from t0—t12 as measured by the Suicidal Ideation Attributes Scale (SIDAS), plus achieving SIDAS < 20 at t12 (i.e. below the clinical threshold).

From the healthcare perspective, DBT cost €371 less than TAU while gaining an additional 0.184 QALYs, with a 64% likelihood of being the dominant treatment option. From the societal perspective, DBT has higher costs than TAU by €232 per QALY gained, which can be considered cost-effective given a willingness-to-pay of €50,000 per QALY. DBT also showed better treatment response rates, with less suicidal ideation, at lower costs than TAU. Sensitivity analyses supported these findings.

DBT is a novel treatment for autistic adults with suicidality. It fills a significant treatment gap in lieu of any evidence-based alternative for this population. DBT reduces suicidality, enhances quality of life and is cost-effective across healthcare and societal perspectives, encouraging broader adoption. Future research should assess DBT’s long-term impacts and its transferability to other countries and map pathways towards upscaled implementation.

The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s10198-025-01794-3.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** autism (MESH:D001321), suicidal behaviours (MESH:D001523), Suicidal Ideation (MESH:D001072)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

2 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12618375/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12618375