Cummins Justin S, Tomek Ivan M, Kantor Stephen R, Furnes Ove, Engesaeter Lars Birger, Finlayson Samuel R G
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center, One Medical Center Drive, Lebanon, NH 03756, USA.
J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2009 Mar 1;91(3):634-41. doi: 10.2106/JBJS.G.01029.
Antibiotic-impregnated bone cement is infrequently used in the United States for primary total hip arthroplasty because of concerns about cost, performance, and the possible development of antibiotic resistance and because it has been approved only for use in revision arthroplasty after infection. The purpose of this study was to model the use of antibiotic-impregnated bone cement in primary total hip arthroplasty for the treatment of osteoarthritis to determine whether use of the cement is cost-effective when compared with the use of cement without antibiotics.
To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of each strategy, we used a Markov decision model to tabulate costs and quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) accumulated by each patient. Rates of revision due to infection and aseptic loosening were estimated from data in the Norwegian Arthroplasty Register and were used to determine the probability of undergoing a revision arthroplasty because of either infection or aseptic loosening. The primary outcome measure was either all revisions or revision due to infection. Perioperative mortality rates, utilities, and disutilities were estimated from data in the arthroplasty literature. Costs for primary arthroplasty were estimated from data on in-hospital resource use in the literature. The additional cost of using antibiotic-impregnated bone cement ($600) was then added to the average cost of the initial procedure ($21,654).
When all revisions were considered to be the primary outcome measure, the use of antibiotic-impregnated bone cement was found to result in a decrease in overall cost of $200 per patient. When revision due to infection was considered to be the primary outcome measure, the use of the cement was found to have an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of $37,355 per QALY compared with cement without antibiotics; this cost-effectiveness compares favorably with that of accepted medical procedures. When only revision due to infection was considered, it was found that the additional cost of the antibiotic-impregnated bone cement would need to exceed $650 or the average patient age would need to be greater than seventy-one years before its cost would exceed $50,000 per QALY gained.
When revision due to either infection or aseptic loosening is considered to be the primary outcome, the use of antibiotic-impregnated bone cement results in an overall cost decrease. When only revision due to infection is considered, the model is strongly influenced by the cost of the cement and the average age of the patients. With few patients less than seventy years of age undergoing total hip arthroplasty with cement in the United States, the use of antibiotic-impregnated bone cement in primary total hip arthroplasty may be of limited value unless its cost is substantially reduced.
在美国,由于担心成本、性能、抗生素耐药性的可能产生,且抗生素骨水泥仅被批准用于感染后的翻修关节成形术,所以在初次全髋关节置换术中很少使用。本研究的目的是建立抗生素骨水泥在初次全髋关节置换术治疗骨关节炎中的使用模型,以确定与使用不含抗生素的骨水泥相比,使用抗生素骨水泥是否具有成本效益。
为了评估每种策略的成本效益,我们使用马尔可夫决策模型来列出每位患者累积的成本和质量调整生命年(QALY)。根据挪威关节置换登记处的数据估算因感染和无菌性松动导致的翻修率,并用于确定因感染或无菌性松动而接受翻修关节成形术的概率。主要结局指标为所有翻修或因感染导致的翻修。围手术期死亡率、效用和负效用根据关节成形术文献中的数据估算。初次关节成形术的成本根据文献中住院资源使用的数据估算。然后将使用抗生素骨水泥的额外成本(600美元)加到初始手术的平均成本(21,654美元)上。
当将所有翻修视为主要结局指标时,发现使用抗生素骨水泥可使每位患者的总体成本降低200美元。当将因感染导致的翻修视为主要结局指标时,发现与不含抗生素的骨水泥相比,使用该骨水泥的增量成本效益比为每QALY 37,355美元;这种成本效益与公认的医疗程序相比具有优势。当仅考虑因感染导致的翻修时,发现抗生素骨水泥的额外成本需要超过650美元,或者患者平均年龄需要大于71岁,其成本才会超过每获得一个QALY 50,000美元。
当将因感染或无菌性松动导致的翻修视为主要结局时,使用抗生素骨水泥可使总体成本降低。当仅考虑因感染导致的翻修时,该模型受骨水泥成本和患者平均年龄的影响很大。在美国,接受骨水泥全髋关节置换术的70岁以下患者很少,除非抗生素骨水泥的成本大幅降低,否则其在初次全髋关节置换术中的使用价值可能有限。