椎体增强包括椎体成形术或后凸成形术治疗癌症相关椎体压缩性骨折:经济分析。

Q1 Medicine Ontario Health Technology Assessment Series Pub Date : 2016-05-01 eCollection Date: 2016-01-01
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:未经治疗的椎体压缩性骨折会产生严重的临床后果,并对患者的生活质量和护理人员造成相当大的影响。由于这些骨折的非手术治疗效果有限,椎体增强术在临床实践中越来越被接受,用于控制疼痛和骨折稳定。本分析的目的是确定后凸成形术或椎体成形术与非手术治疗癌症患者椎体压缩性骨折的成本-效果和预算影响。方法:我们对健康经济学研究进行了系统回顾,以确定比较后凸成形术或椎体成形术与非手术治疗成人癌症椎体压缩性骨折的成本-效果的相关研究。我们还进行了主要的成本-效果分析,以评估在相同人群中,与非手术治疗相比,后凸成形术或椎体成形术的临床获益和成本。我们开发了一个马尔可夫模型来预测治疗的收益和危害,以及相应的质量调整生命年和成本。临床数据和效用数据来源于已发表的资料,而成本数据来源于安大略省的行政资料。我们进行敏感性分析以检验结果的稳健性。此外,使用安大略省行政来源的数据进行了1年预算影响分析。研究探讨了两种情况:(a)安大略省癌症患者椎体增强手术的总数增加,维持目前后凸成形术与椎体成形术的比例;(b)安大略省癌症患者的椎体隆胸手术总数没有增加,但后凸成形术与椎体成形术的比例有所增加。结果:基础病例考虑了后凸成形术和椎体成形术与非手术治疗的不同。后凸成形术和椎体成形术每增加一个质量调整生命年分别增加33,471美元和17,870美元的成本-效果比。2014/15财年,安大略省用于治疗成人癌症患者椎体压缩性骨折的椎体增强手术的预算影响估计约为250万美元。在许多情况下,椎体增强手术的更广泛使用增加了总支出,费用增加了67,302美元至913,386美元。结论:我们的研究结果表明,在普遍接受的支付意愿阈值下,使用后凸成形术或椎体成形术治疗癌症患者的椎体压缩性骨折可能是一种具有成本效益的策略。尽管如此,更广泛地使用后凸成形术(以及较小程度的椎体成形术)可能会导致医疗费用的净增加。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Vertebral Augmentation Involving Vertebroplasty or Kyphoplasty for Cancer-Related Vertebral Compression Fractures: An Economic Analysis.

Background: Untreated vertebral compression fractures can have serious clinical consequences and impose a considerable impact on patients' quality of life and on caregivers. Since non-surgical management of these fractures has limited effectiveness, vertebral augmentation procedures are gaining acceptance in clinical practice for pain control and fracture stabilization. The objective of this analysis was to determine the cost-effectiveness and budgetary impact of kyphoplasty or vertebroplasty compared with non-surgical management for the treatment of vertebral compression fractures in patients with cancer.

Methods: We performed a systematic review of health economic studies to identify relevant studies that compare the cost-effectiveness of kyphoplasty or vertebroplasty with non-surgical management for the treatment of vertebral compression fractures in adults with cancer. We also performed a primary cost-effectiveness analysis to assess the clinical benefits and costs of kyphoplasty or vertebroplasty compared with non-surgical management in the same population. We developed a Markov model to forecast benefits and harms of treatments, and corresponding quality-adjusted life years and costs. Clinical data and utility data were derived from published sources, while costing data were derived using Ontario administrative sources. We performed sensitivity analyses to examine the robustness of the results. In addition, a 1-year budget impact analysis was performed using data from Ontario administrative sources. Two scenarios were explored: (a) an increase in the total number of vertebral augmentation procedures performed among patients with cancer in Ontario, maintaining the current proportion of kyphoplasty versus vertebroplasty; and (b) no increase in the total number of vertebral augmentation procedures performed among patients with cancer in Ontario but an increase in the proportion of kyphoplasties versus vertebroplasties.

Results: The base case considered each of kyphoplasty and vertebroplasty versus non-surgical management. Kyphoplasty and vertebroplasty were associated with an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of $33,471 and $17,870, respectively, per quality-adjusted life-year gained. The budgetary impact of funding vertebral augmentation procedures for the treatment of vertebral compression fractures in adults with cancer in Ontario was estimated at about $2.5 million in fiscal year 2014/15. More widespread use of vertebral augmentation procedures raised total expenditures under a number of scenarios, with costs increasing by $67,302 to $913,386.

Conclusions: Our findings suggest that the use of kyphoplasty or vertebroplasty in the management of vertebral compression fractures in patients with cancer may be a cost-effective strategy at commonly accepted willingness-to-pay thresholds. Nonetheless, more widespread use of kyphoplasty (and vertebroplasty to a lesser extent) would likely be associated with net increases in health care costs.

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Ontario Health Technology Assessment Series
Ontario Health Technology Assessment Series Medicine-Medicine (miscellaneous)
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4.60
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