An Early-Stage Economic Evaluation of Superabsorbent Wound Dressings for the Management of Moderately to Highly Exuding Leg Ulcers in Slovakian Settings.
Vladica M Veličković, Anna Serafin, Yana Arlouskaya, Thurid-Christiane Milde, Beáta Grešš Halász
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: The management of chronic leg ulcers, including venous leg ulcers (VLUs), causes a considerable economic and clinical burden to healthcare systems. Factors such as nursing time, hospital care, and wound dressings account for approximately 85% of the total cost. Superabsorbent dressings (eg, superabsorbent polymers [SAPs]) are recommended as a first-line treatment for moderately to highly exuding VLUs.
Objective: To assess the cost-effectiveness of utilizing SAPs compared with the standard of care (SoC) for managing patients with moderately to highly exuding VLUs within the Slovakia healthcare settings.
Methods: The decision-analytic modeling method used a Markov process as microsimulation, with a time horizon of 6 months, from the perspective of the third-party payer in Slovakia. All model inputs were based on data identified through systematic literature reviews.
Results: According to model predictions, the use of SAPs instead of SoC in patients with moderately to highly exuding leg ulcers in Slovakian settings would lead to an improved healing rate of 2.2%, incremental health-related quality of life of 0.143 quality-adjusted life-weeks, and total direct cost savings of €75 (USD $82) per patient over a 6-month period.
Conclusions: The evaluation's results align with clinical recommendations that endorse superabsorbent wound dressings as the preferred first-line treatment for moderately to highly exuding VLUs. The findings support the use of these dressings as a cost-saving solution for the National Insurance in Slovakia, when compared with SoC.
期刊介绍:
A peer-reviewed, multidisciplinary journal, Advances in Skin & Wound Care is highly regarded for its unique balance of cutting-edge original research and practical clinical management articles on wounds and other problems of skin integrity. Each issue features CME/CE for physicians and nurses, the first journal in the field to regularly offer continuing education for both disciplines.