Department of Radiology, Erasmus MC-University Medical Center Rotterdam, PO Box 2040, 3000 CA Rotterdam, Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
Radiology. 2010 Feb;254(2):532-40. doi: 10.1148/radiol.2541081672.
To compare the cost-effectiveness of using selective computed tomographic (CT) strategies with that of performing CT in all patients with minor head injury (MHI).
The internal review board approved the study; written informed consent was obtained from all interviewed patients. Five strategies were evaluated, with CT performed in all patients with MHI; selectively according to the New Orleans criteria (NOC), Canadian CT head rule (CCHR), or CT in head injury patients (CHIP) rule; or in no patients. A decision tree was used to analyze short-term costs and effectiveness, and a Markov model was used to analyze long-term costs and effectiveness. n-Way and probabilistic sensitivity analyses and value-of-information (VOI) analysis were performed. Data from the multicenter CHIP Study involving 3181 patients with MHI were used. Outcome measures were first-year and lifetime costs, quality-adjusted life-years, and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios.
Study results showed that performing CT selectively according to the CCHR or the CHIP rule could lead to substantial U.S. cost savings ($120 million and $71 million, respectively), and the CCHR was the most cost-effective at reference-case analysis. When the prediction rule had lower than 97% sensitivity for the identification of patients who required neurosurgery, performing CT in all patients was cost-effective. The CHIP rule was most likely to be cost-effective. At VOI analysis, the expected value of perfect information was $7 billion, mainly because of uncertainty about long-term functional outcomes.
Selecting patients with MHI for CT renders cost savings and may be cost-effective, provided the sensitivity for the identification of patients who require neurosurgery is extremely high. Uncertainty regarding long-term functional outcomes after MHI justifies the routine use of CT in all patients with these injuries.
比较选择性使用计算机断层扫描(CT)策略与对所有轻度头部损伤(MHI)患者进行 CT 的成本效益。
内部审查委员会批准了该研究;所有接受访谈的患者均获得书面知情同意。评估了五种策略,所有 MHI 患者均行 CT;根据新奥尔良标准(NOC)、加拿大 CT 头部规则(CCHR)或 CT 头部损伤患者规则(CHIP)选择性进行;或不进行 CT。使用决策树分析短期成本和效果,使用马尔可夫模型分析长期成本和效果。进行了 n 路和概率敏感性分析以及价值信息(VOI)分析。使用了涉及 3181 例 MHI 患者的多中心 CHIP 研究的数据。结果测量为第一年和终生成本、质量调整生命年和增量成本效益比。
研究结果表明,根据 CCHR 或 CHIP 规则选择性地进行 CT 检查可以为美国节省大量成本(分别为 1.2 亿美元和 7100 万美元),并且 CCHR 在参考案例分析中最具成本效益。当预测规则对需要神经外科治疗的患者的识别敏感度低于 97%时,对所有患者进行 CT 检查具有成本效益。CHIP 规则最有可能具有成本效益。在 VOI 分析中,完美信息的预期价值为 70 亿美元,主要是因为对 MHI 后长期功能结果的不确定性。
选择 MHI 患者进行 CT 检查可节省成本并具有成本效益,前提是对需要神经外科治疗的患者的识别敏感度极高。对 MHI 后长期功能结果的不确定性证明对所有这些损伤患者常规使用 CT 是合理的。