Department of Health Sciences Research, Division of Epidemiology, Mayo Clinic, 200 First Street, S.W. Rochester, MN 55905, USA.
J Neurotrauma. 2012 Jul 20;29(11):2038-49. doi: 10.1089/neu.2010.1713. Epub 2012 Apr 26.
Data on traumatic brain injury (TBI) economic outcomes are limited. We used Rochester Epidemiology Project (REP) resources to estimate long-term medical costs for clinically-confirmed incident TBI across the full range of severity after controlling for pre-existing conditions and co-occurring injuries. All Olmsted County, Minnesota, residents with diagnoses indicative of potential TBI from 1985-2000 (n=46,114) were identified, and a random sample (n=7175) was selected for medical record review to confirm case status, and to characterize as definite (moderate/severe), probable (mild), or possible (symptomatic) TBI. For each case, we identified one age- and sex-matched non-TBI control registered in REP in the same year (±1 year) as case's TBI. Cases with co-occurring non-head injuries were assessed for non-head-injury severity and assigned similar non-head-injury-severity controls. The 1145 case/control pairs for 1988-2000 were followed until earliest death/emigration of either member for medical costs 12 months before and up to 6 years after baseline (i.e., injury date for cases and comparable dates for controls). Differences between case and control costs were stratified by TBI severity, as defined by evidence of brain injury; comparisons used Wilcoxon signed-rank plus multivariate modeling (adjusted for pre-baseline characteristics). From baseline until 6 years, each TBI category exhibited significant incremental costs. For definite and probable TBI, most incremental costs occurred within the first 6 months; significant long-term incremental medical costs were not apparent among 1-year survivors. By contrast, cost differences between possible TBI cases and controls were not as great within the first 6 months, but were substantial among 1-year survivors. Although mean incremental costs were highest for definite cases, probable and possible cases accounted for>90% of all TBI events and 66% of total incremental costs. Preventing probable and possible events might facilitate substantial reductions in TBI-associated medical care costs.
创伤性脑损伤 (TBI) 的经济结果数据有限。我们使用罗切斯特流行病学项目 (REP) 的资源,在控制了先前存在的疾病和并发损伤的情况下,对从轻度到重度的所有确诊的 TBI 患者进行了长期医疗成本估计。在明尼苏达州罗彻斯特市的所有奥姆斯特德县居民中,1985 年至 2000 年期间(n=46114)诊断为 TBI 有潜在可能的患者,随机选择(n=7175)进行病历审查以确认病例状态,并将其归类为明确(中度/重度)、可能(轻度)或可能(症状性)TBI。对于每个病例,我们在 REP 中确定了与病例 TBI 同年(±1 年)注册的年龄和性别匹配的非 TBI 对照者。伴有并发非头部损伤的病例,评估非头部损伤的严重程度并分配类似的非头部损伤严重程度对照者。1988 年至 2000 年的 1145 对病例/对照者在基线前 12 个月和之后 6 年内(即病例的损伤日期和对照者的可比日期)进行了随访,直到任何成员的最早死亡/移民为止,以记录医疗费用。病例和对照者之间的费用差异按 TBI 严重程度分层,根据有无脑损伤的证据进行定义;比较使用 Wilcoxon 符号秩检验加多元模型(调整了基线前特征)。从基线到 6 年,每个 TBI 类别都显示出显著的增量成本。对于明确和可能的 TBI,大多数增量成本发生在最初的 6 个月内;在 1 年幸存者中,没有明显的长期增量医疗成本。相比之下,在最初的 6 个月内,可能的 TBI 病例和对照者之间的成本差异没有那么大,但在 1 年幸存者中差异较大。虽然明确病例的平均增量成本最高,但可能和可能的病例占所有 TBI 事件的>90%和总增量成本的 66%。预防可能和可能的事件可能会大大降低与 TBI 相关的医疗费用。