Department of Orthopaedics, Massachusetts General Hospital, 55 Fruit Street, Yawkey Suite 3B, Boston, MA 02114. E-mail address for H. Bedair:
Harris Orthopaedics Lab, Massachusetts General Hospital, 55 Fruit Street, GRJ 1121, Boston, MA 02114.
J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2014 Jan 15;96(2):119-26. doi: 10.2106/JBJS.L.01736.
To our knowledge, the economic implications of total knee arthroplasty to society at large have not been assessed with specific consideration of the young working population with osteoarthritis of the knee. The goal of the present study was to use a Markov analysis to estimate the overall average cost to society--in terms of medical expenses and lost wages--of delaying early total knee arthroplasty in favor of nonoperative treatment for end-stage knee osteoarthritis in a hypothetical fifty-year-old patient.
A Markov state-transition decision model was constructed to compare the overall average cost over thirty years of total knee arthroplasty with the average thirty-year cost of nonoperative treatment for a fifty-year-old patient with end-stage osteoarthritis. Earned income, lost wages, and direct medical costs related to nonoperative treatment and to total knee arthroplasty, including revisions and complications, were considered. A sensitivity analysis was performed to assess the effect that variation of key model parameters had on the overall outcome of the model.
This Markov model favored early total knee arthroplasty over nonoperative treatment across all plausible values for most input parameters assessed during one-way sensitivity analysis. Total knee arthroplasty was more expensive during the first 3.5 years because of higher initial costs, but over thirty years the cost benefit of total knee arthroplasty was $69,800 (2012 U.S. dollars). Only when lost wages were <17.7 equivalent work days per year for patients treated nonoperatively or when the rate of returning to work after total knee arthroplasty was <81% did the model favor nonoperative treatment.
The results of the current study demonstrated that the total economic cost to society for treatment of severe knee osteoarthritis in a relatively young working person is markedly lower with total knee arthroplasty than it is with nonoperative treatment. The increasing financial restrictions on health-care providers in the U.S. necessitate careful consideration of the economic impact of different treatment options from the societal perspective.
The results of this model illustrate the need to account for the implications of treatment choices, not only at the individual patient level, but also for society at large. When deciding among available treatment options, patients, physicians, payers, and policymakers must consider individual treatment cost and effectiveness but also should account for future potential earnings generated when a treatment may restore a patient's ability to contribute to society.
据我们所知,尚未考虑到患有膝关节骨关节炎的年轻劳动人群,对全膝关节置换术对整个社会的经济影响进行评估。本研究的目的是使用马尔可夫分析来估算,如果为了避免晚期膝关节骨关节炎而延迟对五十岁患者进行早期全膝关节置换术,转而选择非手术治疗,那么从医疗费用和工资损失的角度来看,对社会造成的总体平均成本。
构建了马尔可夫状态转移决策模型,以比较对五十岁晚期膝关节骨关节炎患者进行全膝关节置换术与非手术治疗的三十年平均成本。考虑了与非手术治疗和全膝关节置换术(包括翻修和并发症)相关的应得收入、工资损失和直接医疗费用。进行了敏感性分析,以评估关键模型参数的变化对模型整体结果的影响。
在单向敏感性分析中评估的大多数输入参数的所有合理值下,该马尔可夫模型都支持早期全膝关节置换术而非非手术治疗。由于初始成本较高,全膝关节置换术在最初 3.5 年内的费用较高,但在三十年中,全膝关节置换术的成本效益为 69800 美元(2012 年美元)。只有当非手术治疗患者的工资损失<每年 17.7 个等效工作日,或者全膝关节置换术后重返工作岗位的比例<81%时,该模型才支持非手术治疗。
本研究结果表明,对于相对年轻的劳动者中严重膝关节骨关节炎的治疗,全膝关节置换术的社会总成本明显低于非手术治疗。美国医疗保健提供者的财务限制日益增加,需要从社会角度仔细考虑不同治疗方案的经济影响。
该模型的结果表明,不仅需要考虑个体患者层面的治疗选择的影响,还需要考虑到整个社会。在选择可用的治疗方案时,患者、医生、支付方和决策者必须考虑个人治疗成本和效果,但还应考虑治疗可能恢复患者为社会做出贡献的能力时未来的潜在收益。