Nishijima Daniel K, Yang Zhuo, Urbich Michael, Holmes James F, Zwienenberg-Lee Marike, Melnikow Joy, Kuppermann Nathan
Department of Emergency Medicine, UC Davis School of Medicine, Sacramento, CA.
Center for Healthcare Policy and Research, UC Davis School of Medicine, Sacramento, CA.
Ann Emerg Med. 2015 Jan;65(1):72-80.e6. doi: 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2014.08.019. Epub 2014 Nov 12.
To improve the efficiency and appropriateness of computed tomography (CT) use in children with minor head trauma, clinical prediction rules were derived and validated by the Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network (PECARN). The objective of this study was to conduct a cost-effectiveness analysis comparing the PECARN traumatic brain injury prediction rules to usual care for selective CT use.
We used decision analytic modeling to project the outcomes, costs, and cost-effectiveness of applying the PECARN rules compared with usual care in a hypothetical cohort of 1,000 children with minor blunt head trauma. Clinical management was directed by level of risk as specified by the presence or absence of variables in the PECARN traumatic brain injury prediction rules. Immediate costs of care (diagnostic testing, treatment [not including clinician time], and hospital stay) were derived on single-center data. Quality-adjusted life-year losses related to the sequelae of clinically important traumatic brain injuries and to radiation-induced cancers, number of CT scans, number of radiation-induced cancers, number of missed clinically important traumatic brain injury, and total costs were evaluated.
Compared with the usual care strategy, the PECARN strategy was projected to miss slightly more children with clinically important traumatic brain injuries (0.26 versus 0.02 per 1,000 children) but used fewer cranial CT scans (274 versus 353), resulted in fewer radiation-induced cancers (0.34 versus 0.45), cost less ($904,940 versus $954,420), and had lower net quality-adjusted life-year loss (-4.64 versus -5.79). Because the PECARN strategy was more effective (less quality-adjusted life-year loss) and less costly, it dominated the usual care strategy. Results were robust under sensitivity analyses.
Application of the PECARN traumatic brain injury prediction rules for children with minor head trauma would lead to beneficial outcomes and more cost-effective care.
为提高轻度头部外伤儿童计算机断层扫描(CT)使用的效率和合理性,儿科急诊护理应用研究网络(PECARN)制定并验证了临床预测规则。本研究的目的是进行一项成本效益分析,比较PECARN创伤性脑损伤预测规则与选择性CT使用的常规护理。
我们使用决策分析模型,对1000名轻度钝性头部外伤儿童的假设队列中应用PECARN规则与常规护理的结果、成本和成本效益进行预测。临床管理根据PECARN创伤性脑损伤预测规则中变量的存在与否所指定的风险水平进行指导。护理的直接成本(诊断测试、治疗[不包括临床医生时间]和住院时间)来自单中心数据。评估了与具有临床意义的创伤性脑损伤后遗症和辐射诱发癌症相关的质量调整生命年损失、CT扫描次数、辐射诱发癌症数量、遗漏的具有临床意义的创伤性脑损伤数量以及总成本。
与常规护理策略相比,预计PECARN策略会遗漏略多一些具有临床意义的创伤性脑损伤儿童(每1000名儿童中分别为0.26例和0.02例),但使用的头颅CT扫描更少(分别为274次和353次),辐射诱发癌症更少(分别为0.34例和0.45例),成本更低(904,940美元对954,420美元),净质量调整生命年损失更低(-4.64对-5.79)。由于PECARN策略更有效(质量调整生命年损失更少)且成本更低,它优于常规护理策略。敏感性分析结果稳健。
将PECARN创伤性脑损伤预测规则应用于轻度头部外伤儿童将带来有益的结果和更具成本效益的护理。