在医疗保险患者人群中膝关节骨关节炎的治疗费用。

IF 1.4 4区 医学 Q3 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES American Health and Drug Benefits Pub Date : 2020-09-01
Gerard Malanga, Faizan Niazi, Vasco Deon Kidd, Edmund Lau, Steven M Kurtz, Kevin L Ong, Andrew L Concoff
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:几种非手术方法被推荐用于治疗膝骨关节炎(OA),证据程度不一。根据美国骨科医师学会的临床实践指南,建议在膝关节置换术前一年将直接治疗费用降低45%,但这并没有考虑整个治疗过程的费用,包括手术和术后护理费用。目的:分析膝关节OA诊断后的总治疗费用,以及关节置换术干预作为膝关节OA相关总费用的一部分的比例,以及接受关节内透明质酸和/或膝关节置换术的患者的总费用是否不同。方法:我们使用2010年1月至2015年12月5%的医疗保险数据样本确定新诊断为膝关节OA的患者。结果:在275256例膝关节OA患者中,45,801例(16.6%)接受了透明质酸注射,35,465例(12.9%)接受了膝关节置换术。接受透明质酸治疗的患者到膝关节置换术的中位时间为16.4个月,而未接受透明质酸治疗的患者为5.7个月。非关节置换术相关治疗和膝关节置换术在膝关节oa相关费用中所占比例相似,透明质酸注射占膝关节oa相关总费用的5.6%。对于接受透明质酸注射并随后进行膝关节置换术的患者,透明质酸注射占膝关节oa相关费用的1.8%,而膝关节置换术费用占76.6%。接受透明质酸注射且未进行膝关节置换术的患者,其膝关节oa相关费用低于接受手术患者的10%。结论:虽然限制透明质酸的使用可能会降低膝关节OA相关的费用,但在本研究中,透明质酸注射仅占膝关节OA相关总费用的一小部分。在接受过膝关节置换术的患者中,接受透明质酸治疗的患者手术延迟中位数为10.7个月,相关费用也有相当长的一段时间。推迟或完全避免膝关节置换术的能力会对医疗费用产生重大影响。
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Knee Osteoarthritis Treatment Costs in the Medicare Patient Population.

Background: Several nonoperative options have been recommended for the treatment of knee osteoarthritis (OA), with varying degrees of evidence. Adhering to the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons clinical practice guidelines has been suggested to decrease direct treatment costs by 45% in the year before knee arthroplasty, but this does not consider the cost of the entire episode of care, including the cost of surgery and postsurgery care.

Objectives: To analyze the total treatment costs after a diagnosis of knee OA, as well as the proportion of arthroplasty interventions as part of the total knee OA-related costs, and whether the total costs differed for patients who received intra-articular hyaluronic acid and/or had knee arthroplasty.

Methods: We identified patients newly diagnosed with knee OA using the 5% Medicare data sample from January 2010 to December 2015. Patients were excluded if they were aged <65 years, had incomplete claim history, did not reside in any of the 50 states, had claim history <12 months before knee OA diagnosis, or did not enroll in Medicare Part A and Part B. The study analyzed knee OA-related costs from a payer perspective in terms of reimbursements provided by Medicare, as well as the time from the diagnosis of knee OA to knee arthroplasty for patients who had knee arthroplasty, and the time from the first hyaluronic acid injection to knee arthroplasty for those who received the injection. We compared patients who received hyaluronic acid and those who did not receive hyaluronic acid injections. Patients who received hyaluronic acid injection who subsequently had knee arthroplasty were also compared with those who did not have subsequent knee arthroplasty.

Results: Of the 275,256 patients with knee OA, 45,801 (16.6%) received a hyaluronic acid injection and 35,465 (12.9%) had knee arthroplasty during the study period. The median time to knee arthroplasty was 16.4 months for patients who received hyaluronic acid versus 5.7 months for those who did not receive hyaluronic acid. Non-arthroplasty-related therapies and knee arthroplasty accounted for similar proportions of knee OA-related costs, with hyaluronic acid injection comprising 5.6% of the total knee OA-related costs. For patients who received hyaluronic acid injections and subsequently had knee arthroplasty, hyaluronic acid injection contributed 1.8% of the knee OA-related costs versus 76.6% of the cost from knee arthroplasty. Patients who received hyaluronic acid injections and did not have knee arthroplasty incurred less than 10% of the knee OA-related costs that patients who had surgery incurred.

Conclusion: Although limiting hyaluronic acid use may reduce the knee OA-related costs, in this study hyaluronic acid injection only comprised a small fraction of the overall costs related to knee OA. Among patients who had knee arthroplasty, those who received treatment with hyaluronic acid had surgery delayed by a median of 10.7 months and associated costs for a significant period. The ability to delay or avoid knee arthroplasty altogether can have a substantial impact on healthcare costs.

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来源期刊
American Health and Drug Benefits
American Health and Drug Benefits Medicine-Health Policy
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
4
期刊介绍: AHDB welcomes articles on clinical-, policy-, and business-related topics relevant to the integration of the forces in healthcare that affect the cost and quality of healthcare delivery, improve healthcare quality, and ultimately result in access to care, focusing on health organization structures and processes, health information, health policies, health and behavioral economics, as well as health technologies, products, and patient behaviors relevant to value-based quality of care.
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