Maria Isabel Barros Guinle BA , Thomas Johnstone BS , Gabriela D. Ruiz Colón MD , Yingjie Weng MHS , Ella A. Nettnin BS , John K. Ratliff MD
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Patients with concomitant or previous “red flag” diagnoses, neurological deficits, or diagnoses that could cause nondegenerative LBP were excluded. Total costs of care in the year of diagnosis were calculated and stratified by operative versus nonoperative management. To assess for guideline adherence, utilization and costs of different services were tabulated. Opioid prescription patterns were characterized by quantity, cost, duration, and medication type.</div></div><div><h3>Results</h3><div>About 1,269,896 patients were identified; 23,919 (1.8%) underwent surgery. These accounted for 7% of the cohort's total cost ($514 million total, $21,496 per person). Patients treated nonoperatively accounted for over $7 billion in costs ($5,880 per person; p<.001). Within the nonoperative cohort, 626,896 (50.3%) patients were nonadherent to current guidelines for conservative management of LBP. Guideline nonadherence increased total annual costs by $4,012 per person ($7,873 for nonadherent vs. $3,861 for adherent patients, p<.001). About 460,867 opioid prescriptions were filled for 303,796 unique patients (23.9%) within 30 days of LBP diagnosis. Within the nonsurgical cohort, patients nonadherent to imaging guidelines were more likely to have an opioid prescription within this window than adherent patients (26.5% vs. 21.2%; p<.001).</div></div><div><h3>Conclusions</h3><div>Nonoperative management of LBP is associated with significantly lower costs per patient. Early imaging and opioid prescription are significant drivers of excess cost. Adherence to proposed treatment guidelines can save over $2.8 billion in total health care costs.</div></div>","PeriodicalId":34622,"journal":{"name":"North American Spine Society Journal","volume":"20 ","pages":"Article 100565"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-12-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Health care utilization among Medicare beneficiaries with newly diagnosed back pain\",\"authors\":\"Maria Isabel Barros Guinle BA , Thomas Johnstone BS , Gabriela D. Ruiz Colón MD , Yingjie Weng MHS , Ella A. Nettnin BS , John K. Ratliff MD\",\"doi\":\"10.1016/j.xnsj.2024.100565\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<div><h3>Background</h3><div>Low back pain (LBP) is the most common medical cause of disability among adults 65 or older. No previous study has characterized health care costs and treatment patterns of LBP among Medicare beneficiaries.</div></div><div><h3>Methods</h3><div>This retrospective cohort study quantifies health care utilization costs among Medicare beneficiaries with newly diagnosed LBP, compares costs between patients managed operatively and nonoperatively, identifies costs associated with treatment guideline nonadherence, and characterizes opioid prescribing patterns. Patients were queried via ICD codes from a 20% random sample of Medicare claims records. Patients with concomitant or previous “red flag” diagnoses, neurological deficits, or diagnoses that could cause nondegenerative LBP were excluded. Total costs of care in the year of diagnosis were calculated and stratified by operative versus nonoperative management. To assess for guideline adherence, utilization and costs of different services were tabulated. Opioid prescription patterns were characterized by quantity, cost, duration, and medication type.</div></div><div><h3>Results</h3><div>About 1,269,896 patients were identified; 23,919 (1.8%) underwent surgery. These accounted for 7% of the cohort's total cost ($514 million total, $21,496 per person). Patients treated nonoperatively accounted for over $7 billion in costs ($5,880 per person; p<.001). Within the nonoperative cohort, 626,896 (50.3%) patients were nonadherent to current guidelines for conservative management of LBP. Guideline nonadherence increased total annual costs by $4,012 per person ($7,873 for nonadherent vs. $3,861 for adherent patients, p<.001). About 460,867 opioid prescriptions were filled for 303,796 unique patients (23.9%) within 30 days of LBP diagnosis. Within the nonsurgical cohort, patients nonadherent to imaging guidelines were more likely to have an opioid prescription within this window than adherent patients (26.5% vs. 21.2%; p<.001).</div></div><div><h3>Conclusions</h3><div>Nonoperative management of LBP is associated with significantly lower costs per patient. Early imaging and opioid prescription are significant drivers of excess cost. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
背景:腰痛(LBP)是65岁及以上成年人致残最常见的医学原因。以前没有研究表征医疗保险受益人的LBP的医疗保健费用和治疗模式。方法本回顾性队列研究量化了新诊断的LBP医疗保险受益人的医疗保健利用成本,比较了手术和非手术治疗患者的成本,确定了与治疗指南不遵守相关的成本,并描述了阿片类药物的处方模式。通过ICD代码从20%的医疗保险索赔记录随机抽样中查询患者。排除伴有或既往“危险信号”诊断、神经功能缺陷或诊断可能导致非退行性腰痛的患者。计算诊断当年的总护理费用,并按手术与非手术管理进行分层。为了评估指南的依从性,不同服务的利用率和成本被制成表格。阿片类药物处方模式以数量、成本、持续时间和药物类型为特征。结果共发现1269896例患者;23919例(1.8%)接受了手术。这些费用占该队列总费用的7%(总计5.14亿美元,每人21,496美元)。非手术治疗患者的费用超过70亿美元(每人5880美元;术;措施)。在非手术队列中,626,896例(50.3%)患者不遵守当前的保守治疗LBP指南。不遵守指南使每人每年的总费用增加了4,012美元(不遵守指南的患者为7,873美元,遵守指南的患者为3,861美元,p < 0.001)。303,796例独特患者(23.9%)在LBP诊断后30天内填写了约460,867张阿片类药物处方。在非手术队列中,未遵循影像学指南的患者比遵循指南的患者更有可能在此窗口内获得阿片类药物处方(26.5% vs. 21.2%;术;措施)。结论非手术治疗腰痛可显著降低患者人均费用。早期成像和阿片类药物处方是造成成本过高的重要因素。遵守拟议的治疗指南可节省超过28亿美元的医疗保健费用总额。
Health care utilization among Medicare beneficiaries with newly diagnosed back pain
Background
Low back pain (LBP) is the most common medical cause of disability among adults 65 or older. No previous study has characterized health care costs and treatment patterns of LBP among Medicare beneficiaries.
Methods
This retrospective cohort study quantifies health care utilization costs among Medicare beneficiaries with newly diagnosed LBP, compares costs between patients managed operatively and nonoperatively, identifies costs associated with treatment guideline nonadherence, and characterizes opioid prescribing patterns. Patients were queried via ICD codes from a 20% random sample of Medicare claims records. Patients with concomitant or previous “red flag” diagnoses, neurological deficits, or diagnoses that could cause nondegenerative LBP were excluded. Total costs of care in the year of diagnosis were calculated and stratified by operative versus nonoperative management. To assess for guideline adherence, utilization and costs of different services were tabulated. Opioid prescription patterns were characterized by quantity, cost, duration, and medication type.
Results
About 1,269,896 patients were identified; 23,919 (1.8%) underwent surgery. These accounted for 7% of the cohort's total cost ($514 million total, $21,496 per person). Patients treated nonoperatively accounted for over $7 billion in costs ($5,880 per person; p<.001). Within the nonoperative cohort, 626,896 (50.3%) patients were nonadherent to current guidelines for conservative management of LBP. Guideline nonadherence increased total annual costs by $4,012 per person ($7,873 for nonadherent vs. $3,861 for adherent patients, p<.001). About 460,867 opioid prescriptions were filled for 303,796 unique patients (23.9%) within 30 days of LBP diagnosis. Within the nonsurgical cohort, patients nonadherent to imaging guidelines were more likely to have an opioid prescription within this window than adherent patients (26.5% vs. 21.2%; p<.001).
Conclusions
Nonoperative management of LBP is associated with significantly lower costs per patient. Early imaging and opioid prescription are significant drivers of excess cost. Adherence to proposed treatment guidelines can save over $2.8 billion in total health care costs.