Bowen James M, Snead O Carter, Chandra Kiran, Blackhouse Gord, Goeree Ron
Programs for Assessment of Technology in Health (PATH) Research Institute, St. Joseph's Healthcare, Hamilton, ON, Canada.
Ont Health Technol Assess Ser. 2012;12(18):1-41. Epub 2012 Jul 1.
In August 2011 a proposed epilepsy care model was presented to the Ontario Health Technology Advisory Committee (OHTAC) by an Expert Panel on a Provincial Strategy for Epilepsy Care in Ontario. The Expert Panel recommended leveraging existing infrastructure in the province to provide enhanced capacity for epilepsy care. The point of entry for epilepsy care and the diagnostic evaluation for surgery candidacy and the epilepsy surgery would occur at regional and district epilepsy centres in London, Hamilton, Toronto, and Ottawa and at new centres recommended for northern and eastern Ontario. This economic analysis report was requested by OHTAC to provide information about the estimated budgetary impact on the Ontario health care system of increasing access to epilepsy surgery and to examine the cost-effectiveness of epilepsy surgery in both children and adults.
A prevalence-based "top-down" health care system budgetary impact model from the perspective of the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care was developed to estimate the potential costs associated with expanding health care services to increase access to epilepsy care in general and epilepsy surgery in particular. A 5-year period (i.e., 2012-2016) was used to project annual costs associated with incremental epilepsy care services. Ontario Health Survey estimates of epilepsy prevalence, published epilepsy incidence data, and Canadian Census results for Ontario were used to approximate the number of individuals with epilepsy in the province. Applying these population estimates to data obtained from a recent field evaluation study that examined patterns of care and costs associated with epilepsy surgery in children, a health care system budget impact was calculated and the total costs and incremental costs associated with increasing access to surgery was estimated. In order to examine the cost-effectiveness of epilepsy surgery in children, a decision analysis compared epilepsy surgery to continued medical management in children with medically intractable epilepsy. Data from the field evaluation were combined with various published data to estimate the costs and outcomes for children with drug-refractory epilepsy over a 20-year period. Outcomes were defined as the number of quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) accumulated over 20 years following epilepsy surgery.
There are about 20,981 individuals with medically intractable epilepsy in Ontario. Of these, 9,619 (1,441 children and 8,178 adults) could potentially be further assessed at regional epilepsy centres for suitability for epilepsy surgery, following initial evaluation at a district epilepsy care centre. The health care system impact analysis related to increasing access to epilepsy surgery in the Ontario through the addition of epilepsy monitoring unit (EMU) beds with video electroencephalography (vEEG) monitoring (total capacity of 15 pediatric EMU beds and 35 adult EMU beds distributed across the province) and the associated clinical resources is estimated to require an incremental $18.1 million (Cdn) annually over the next 5 years from 2012 to 2016. This would allow for about 675 children and 1050 adults to be evaluated each year for suitability for epilepsy surgery representing a 150% increase in pediatric epilepsy surgery evaluation and a 170% increase in adult epilepsy surgery evaluation. Epilepsy surgery was found to be cost-effective compared to continued medical management in children with drug-refractory epilepsy with the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of $25,020 (Cdn) to $69,451 (Cdn) per QALY for 2 of the scenarios examined. In the case of choosing epilepsy surgery versus continued medical management in children known to be suitable for surgery, the epilepsy surgery was found to be less costly and provided greater clinical benefit, that is, it was the dominant strategy.
Epilepsy surgery for medically intractable epilepsy in suitable candidates has consistently been found to provide favourable clinical outcomes and has been demonstrated to be cost-effective in both adult and child patient populations. The first step to increasing access to epilepsy surgery is to provide access to evidence-based care for all patients with epilepsy, both adults and children, through the provision of resources to expand EMU bed capacity and associated clinical personnel across the province of Ontario.
2011年8月,安大略省癫痫护理省级战略专家小组向安大略省卫生技术咨询委员会(OHTAC)提交了一项拟议的癫痫护理模式。专家小组建议利用该省现有的基础设施,以增强癫痫护理能力。癫痫护理的切入点、手术候选资格的诊断评估以及癫痫手术将在伦敦、汉密尔顿、多伦多和渥太华的区域和地区癫痫中心,以及安大略省北部和东部推荐设立的新中心进行。OHTAC要求撰写这份经济分析报告,以提供关于增加癫痫手术可及性对安大略省医疗保健系统估计预算影响的信息,并研究癫痫手术在儿童和成人中的成本效益。
从卫生和长期护理部的角度开发了一种基于患病率的“自上而下”医疗保健系统预算影响模型,以估计与扩大医疗保健服务相关的潜在成本,特别是增加癫痫护理尤其是癫痫手术的可及性。使用5年时间(即2012 - 2016年)来预测与新增癫痫护理服务相关的年度成本。安大略省卫生调查对癫痫患病率的估计、已发表的癫痫发病率数据以及安大略省的加拿大人口普查结果,用于估算该省癫痫患者的数量。将这些人口估计数应用于从最近一项实地评估研究获得的数据,该研究考察了儿童癫痫手术的护理模式和相关成本,计算了医疗保健系统预算影响,并估计了增加手术可及性的总成本和增量成本。为了研究儿童癫痫手术的成本效益,进行了一项决策分析,将癫痫手术与药物难治性癫痫儿童的持续药物治疗进行比较。将实地评估的数据与各种已发表的数据相结合,以估计药物难治性癫痫儿童20年期间的成本和结果。结果定义为癫痫手术后20年积累的质量调整生命年(QALY)数量。
安大略省约有20,981名药物难治性癫痫患者。其中,9,619名(1,441名儿童和8,178名成人)在地区癫痫护理中心进行初步评估后,有可能在区域癫痫中心进一步评估是否适合进行癫痫手术。与通过增加配备视频脑电图(vEEG)监测的癫痫监测单元(EMU)床位(全省共15张儿科EMU床位和35张成人EMU床位)以及相关临床资源来增加安大略省癫痫手术可及性相关的医疗保健系统影响分析估计,在2012年至2016年的未来5年中,每年需要额外增加1810万加元(加拿大)。这将使每年约675名儿童和1050名成人能够接受癫痫手术适合性评估,这意味着儿科癫痫手术评估增加150%,成人癫痫手术评估增加170%。在研究的两种情况下,发现与药物难治性癫痫儿童的持续药物治疗相比,癫痫手术具有成本效益,每获得一个QALY的增量成本效益比为25,020加元(加拿大)至69,451加元(加拿大)。对于已知适合手术的儿童,选择癫痫手术而非持续药物治疗时,发现癫痫手术成本更低且临床效益更大,即它是主导策略。
对于适合的药物难治性癫痫患者,癫痫手术一直被发现能提供良好的临床结果,并且在成人和儿童患者群体中都已证明具有成本效益。增加癫痫手术可及性的第一步是通过提供资源来扩大全省的EMU床位容量和相关临床人员,为所有癫痫患者(包括成人和儿童)提供基于证据的护理。