Objective: To compare the cost and quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) of hysterectomy, myomectomy, and uterine artery embolization (UAE) for symptomatic control of uterine fibroids.
Design: A cost-utility analysis conducted by using Markov modeling.
Setting: The analysis was conducted from the perspective of Hong Kong society.
Patient(s): A hypothetical cohort of patients presenting with symptomatic uterine fibroids.
Intervention(s): Hysterectomy, myomectomy, or UAE.
Main outcome measure(s): Health-care resource use and QALYs over 5 years.
Result(s): The base-case analysis showed that hysterectomy was the most effective treatment (4.368 QALYs), followed by myomectomy (4.273 QALYs) and UAE (4.245 QALYs) over 5 years. Hysterectomy was less costly (USD8418) (1USD = 7.8HKD) than UAE (USD8847) and myomectomy (USD9036). Monte Carlo 10,000 simulations showed that the hysterectomy group was less costly than the UAE and myomectomy groups 84.1% and 79.1% of the time, and it also gained higher number of QALYs than the UAE and myomectomy groups over 97% of the time.
Conclusion(s): Hysterectomy appears to be more cost-effective than myomectomy and UAE for management of symptomatic uterine fibroids over a 5-year period among patients who do not have a preference for uterus-conserving interventions.