Radcliff Kris, Lerner Jason, Yang Chao, Bernard Thierry, Zigler Jack E
Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Rothman Institute, Egg Harbor Township, New Jersey;
Evidence Based Medicine.
J Neurosurg Spine. 2016 May;24(5):760-8. doi: 10.3171/2015.10.SPINE15505. Epub 2016 Jan 29.
OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study was to evaluate the 7-year cost-effectiveness of cervical total disc replacement (CTDR) versus anterior cervical discectomy and fusion (ACDF) for the treatment of patients with single-level symptomatic degenerative disc disease. A change in the spending trajectory for spine care is to be achieved, in part, through the selection of interventions that have been proven effective yet cost less than other options. This analysis complements and builds upon findings from other cost-effectiveness evaluations of CTDR through the use of long-term, patient-level data from a randomized study. METHODS This was a 7-year health economic evaluation comparing CTDR versus ACDF from the US commercial payer perspective. Prospectively collected health care resource utilization and treatment effects (quality-adjusted life years [QALYs]) were obtained from individual patient-level adverse event reports and SF-36 data, respectively, from the randomized, multicenter ProDisc-C total disc replacement investigational device exemption (IDE) study and post-approval study. Statistical distributions for unit costs were derived from a commercial claims database and applied using Monte Carlo simulation. Patient-level costs and effects were modeled via multivariate probabilistic analysis. Confidence intervals for 7-year costs, effects, and net monetary benefit (NMB) were obtained using the nonparametric percentile method from results of 10,000 bootstrap simulations. The robustness of results was assessed through scenario analysis and within a parametric regression model controlling for baseline variables. RESULTS Seven-year follow-up data were available for more than 70% of the 209 randomized patients. In the base-case analysis, CTDR resulted in mean per-patient cost savings of $12,789 (95% CI $5362-$20,856) and per-patient QALY gains of 0.16 (95% CI -0.073 to 0.39) compared with ACDF over 7 years. CTDR was more effective and less costly in 90.8% of probabilistic simulations. CTDR was cost-effective in 99.8% of sensitivity analysis simulations and generated a mean incremental NMB of $20,679 (95% CI $6053-$35,377) per patient at a willingness-to-pay threshold of $50,000/QALY. CONCLUSIONS Based on this modeling evaluation, CTDR was found to be more effective and less costly over a 7-year time horizon for patients with single-level symptomatic degenerative disc disease. These results are robust across a range of scenarios and perspectives and are intended to support value-based decision making.
目的 本研究旨在评估颈椎间盘置换术(CTDR)与颈椎前路椎间盘切除融合术(ACDF)治疗单节段症状性退行性椎间盘疾病患者的7年成本效益。部分通过选择已被证明有效但成本低于其他选择的干预措施,来实现脊柱护理支出轨迹的改变。本分析通过使用来自一项随机研究的长期患者层面数据,对CTDR的其他成本效益评估结果进行补充并在此基础上展开。方法 这是一项从美国商业支付方角度比较CTDR与ACDF的7年卫生经济评估。前瞻性收集的医疗保健资源利用情况和治疗效果(质量调整生命年[QALYs])分别来自随机、多中心ProDisc-C全椎间盘置换研究性器械豁免(IDE)研究及批准后研究中的个体患者层面不良事件报告和SF-36数据。单位成本的统计分布来自商业索赔数据库,并使用蒙特卡罗模拟应用。患者层面的成本和效果通过多变量概率分析进行建模。使用非参数百分位数法从10,000次自助模拟结果中获得7年成本、效果和净货币效益(NMB)的置信区间。通过情景分析并在控制基线变量的参数回归模型中评估结果的稳健性。结果 209例随机分组患者中有70%以上有7年随访数据。在基础病例分析中,与ACDF相比,CTDR在7年中使每位患者平均节省成本12,789美元(95%CI 5362 - 20,856美元),每位患者的QALY增加0.16(95%CI - 0.073至0.39)。在90.8%的概率模拟中,CTDR更有效且成本更低。在99.8%的敏感性分析模拟中,CTDR具有成本效益,在支付意愿阈值为50,000美元/QALY时,每位患者产生的平均增量NMB为20,679美元(95%CI 6053 - 35,377美元)。结论 基于此建模评估,发现CTDR在7年时间范围内对单节段症状性退行性椎间盘疾病患者更有效且成本更低。这些结果在一系列情景和视角下都很稳健,旨在支持基于价值的决策制定。