Professor Borislava Mihaylova
Borislava Mihaylova
MSc, DPhil
Professor of Health Economics
- Health Economics Research Centre
Borislava (Boby) Mihaylova is Professor of Health Economics at the Health Economics Research Centre in Oxford Population Health.
Her research programme focuses on economic aspects of chronic disease (such as cardiovascular, chronic kidney disease and diabetes) and comprises studies of the impact of disease events and interventions on morbidity, mortality, health-related quality of life and healthcare costs; development of disease models to evaluate long-term effects of disease and interventions, cost-effectiveness analyses of healthcare interventions and studies of socio-economic determinants of health.
She is leading/has led the development of the economic analyses in a number of large randomised controlled trials (EMPA-KIDNEY, ACST-2, REVEAL, SHARP, THRIVE) and in the individual participant data meta-analysis of statin trials (Cholesterol Treatment Collaboration).
Her work on effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of statins for cardiovascular disease prevention in the Heart Protection Study and the Cholesterol Treatment Collaboration has been influential in informing treatment recommendations for people at different vascular disease risk.
Recent publications
Digital self-management programme for pain, fatigue and faecal incontinence in inflammatory bowel disease: cost-effectiveness analysis of the IBD-BOOST randomised controlled trial.
Journal article
Roukas C. et al, (2026), BMJ Open Gastroenterol, 13
Green dialysis: environmentally sustainable care, growth, and innovation: conclusions from a Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) Controversies Conference
Journal article
Barraclough KA. et al, (2026), Kidney International, 110, 42 - 60
Erratum to "2025 Focused update of the 2019 ESC/EAS guidelines for the management of dyslipidaemias" [Atherosclerosis, 409, (October 2025), 120479].
Journal article
Mach F. et al, (2026), Atherosclerosis, 415
Lifetime Effects of Adherence to Cardiovascular and Diabetes Medications in Spain: A Modelling Study in a Population Cohort of 152,117 Patients.
Journal article
Sánchez-Viñas A. et al, (2026), Pharmacoeconomics
