McFarlane Phil, Komenda Paul
Department of Medicine, St. Michael's Hospital Division of Nephrology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada.
Semin Dial. 2011 Nov-Dec;24(6):678-83. doi: 10.1111/j.1525-139X.2011.01007.x. Epub 2011 Nov 29.
Hemodialysis (HD) is often used as an example of the most expensive chronic medical intervention that society will pay for on an ongoing basis. More intensive forms of HD have been associated with improved clinical outcomes, but concerns have been raised regarding the possibility of increased costs. We review recent Canadian studies examining the costs and cost utility of intensive HD, with a focus on comparisons with conventional in-center hemodialysis (IHD). The costs of starting a new home nocturnal hemodialysis (HNHD) program in British Columbia was estimated to be about $510,000 for the first year of the program, including the training of the first 53 patients, or about $18,830 per patient. A study by Lee et al. found the costs of home HD to be substantially less than IHD ($93,976 vs. $54,936, p < 0.001). A study by Kroeker et al. found that the lowest costs were seen with home short daily HD ($82,522), compared with $89,154 for IHD, and $91,218 for HNHD. Two studies by McFarlane et al. found that total costs were lower for those receiving HNHD (IHD $87,172 vs. HNHD $71,313), and that HNHD was associated with a superior cost-utility ratio (CAN$ 2011, HNHD $84,430/quality-adjusted life year [QALY] vs. IHD $148,722/QALY, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio: -$54,281, p < 0.05). While consistent findings of lower staffing and overhead costs for home HD, and higher consumable costs for frequent dialysis are probably reliable, findings of lower medication and hospital admission costs seen with intensive HD will need confirmation in randomized studies. Modifications to conventional dialysis funding are needed to accommodate for the additional costs of supplies and technology needed to support intensive modalities.
血液透析(HD)常被用作社会持续支付的最昂贵慢性医疗干预措施的例子。更强化的血液透析形式与改善临床结局相关,但人们对成本增加的可能性表示担忧。我们回顾了加拿大最近关于强化血液透析成本和成本效用的研究,重点是与传统中心血液透析(IHD)的比较。在不列颠哥伦比亚省启动一个新的家庭夜间血液透析(HNHD)项目的第一年成本估计约为510,000美元,包括对首批53名患者的培训,即每位患者约18,830美元。Lee等人的一项研究发现,家庭血液透析的成本大大低于中心血液透析(93,976美元对54,936美元,p<0.001)。Kroeker等人的一项研究发现,家庭短日血液透析成本最低(82,522美元),相比之下,中心血液透析为89,154美元,家庭夜间血液透析为91,218美元。McFarlane等人的两项研究发现,接受家庭夜间血液透析者的总成本较低(中心血液透析87,172美元对家庭夜间血液透析71,313美元),并且家庭夜间血液透析具有更高的成本效用比(2011年加元,家庭夜间血液透析84,430美元/质量调整生命年[QALY]对中心血液透析148,722美元/QALY,增量成本效益比:-54,281美元,p<0.05)。虽然家庭血液透析人员配备和间接费用较低以及频繁透析耗材成本较高的一致发现可能是可靠的,但强化血液透析药物和住院成本较低的发现需要在随机研究中得到证实。需要对传统透析资金进行调整,以适应支持强化模式所需的额外耗材和技术成本。