Graves Nicholas, Wloch Catherine, Wilson Jennie, Barnett Adrian, Sutton Alex, Cooper Nicola, Merollini Katharina, McCreanor Victoria, Cheng Qinglu, Burn Edward, Lamagni Theresa, Charlett Andre
School of Public Health and Social Work, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, QLD, Australia.
Public Health England, Colindale, UK.
Health Technol Assess. 2016 Jul;20(54):1-144. doi: 10.3310/hta20540.
A deep infection of the surgical site is reported in 0.7% of all cases of total hip arthroplasty (THA). This often leads to revision surgery that is invasive, painful and costly. A range of strategies is employed in NHS hospitals to reduce risk, yet no economic analysis has been undertaken to compare the value for money of competing prevention strategies.
To compare the costs and health benefits of strategies that reduce the risk of deep infection following THA in NHS hospitals. To make recommendations to decision-makers about the cost-effectiveness of the alternatives.
The study comprised a systematic review and cost-effectiveness decision analysis.
77,321 patients who had a primary hip arthroplasty in NHS hospitals in 2012.
Nine different treatment strategies including antibiotic prophylaxis, antibiotic-impregnated cement and ventilation systems used in the operating theatre.
Change in the number of deep infections, change in the total costs and change in the total health benefits in quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs).
Literature searches using MEDLINE, EMBASE, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials were undertaken to cover the period 1966-2012 to identify infection prevention strategies. Relevant journals, conference proceedings and bibliographies of retrieved papers were hand-searched. Orthopaedic surgeons and infection prevention experts were also consulted.
English-language papers only. The selection of evidence was by two independent reviewers. Studies were included if they were interventions that reported THA-related deep surgical site infection (SSI) as an outcome. Mixed-treatment comparisons were made to produce estimates of the relative effects of competing infection control strategies.
Twelve studies, six randomised controlled trials and six observational studies, involving 123,788 total hip replacements (THRs) and nine infection control strategies, were identified. The quality of the evidence was judged against four categories developed by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence Methods for Development of NICE Public Health Guidance ( http://publications.nice.org.uk/methods-for-the-development-of-nice-public-health-guidance-third-edition-pmg4 ), accessed March 2012. All evidence was found to fit the two highest categories of 1 and 2. Nine competing infection control interventions [treatments (Ts) 1-9] were used in a cohort simulation model of 77,321 patients who had a primary THR in 2012. Predictions were made for cases of deep infection and total costs, and QALY outcomes. Compared with a baseline of T1 (no systemic antibiotics, plain cement and conventional ventilation) all other treatment strategies reduced risk. T6 was the most effective (systemic antibiotics, antibiotic-impregnated cement and conventional ventilation) and prevented a further 1481 cases of deep infection, and led to the largest annual cost savings and the greatest gains to QALYs. The additional uses of laminar airflow and body exhaust suits indicate higher costs and worse health outcomes.
T6 is an optimal strategy for reducing the risk of SSI following THA. The other strategies that are commonly used among NHS hospitals lead to higher cost and worse QALY outcomes. Policy-makers, therefore, have an opportunity to save resources and improve health outcomes. The effects of laminar air flow and body exhaust suits might be further studied if policy-makers are to consider disinvesting in these technologies.
A wide range of evidence sources was synthesised and there is large uncertainty in the conclusions.
The National Institute for Health Research Health Technology Assessment programme and the Queensland Health Quality Improvement and Enhancement Programme (grant number 2008001769).
在所有全髋关节置换术(THA)病例中,手术部位深部感染的报告发生率为0.7%。这通常会导致翻修手术,而翻修手术具有侵入性、痛苦且成本高昂。英国国家医疗服务体系(NHS)医院采用了一系列策略来降低风险,但尚未进行经济分析以比较相互竞争的预防策略的性价比。
比较NHS医院中降低THA后深部感染风险的策略的成本和健康效益。就替代方案的成本效益向决策者提出建议。
该研究包括系统评价和成本效益决策分析。
2012年在NHS医院接受初次髋关节置换术的77321名患者。
九种不同的治疗策略,包括抗生素预防、含抗生素骨水泥和手术室使用的通风系统。
深部感染数量的变化、总成本的变化以及质量调整生命年(QALY)中总健康效益的变化。
利用MEDLINE、EMBASE、护理学与健康相关文献累积索引以及Cochrane对照试验中心注册库进行文献检索,覆盖1966年至2012年期间,以确定感染预防策略。对手检了相关期刊、会议论文集和检索论文的参考文献。还咨询了骨科医生和感染预防专家。
仅纳入英文论文。由两名独立评审员选择证据。如果研究是将THA相关的深部手术部位感染(SSI)作为结局报告的干预措施,则纳入研究。进行混合治疗比较以估计相互竞争的感染控制策略的相对效果。
确定了12项研究,包括6项随机对照试验和6项观察性研究,涉及123788例全髋关节置换术(THR)和9种感染控制策略。根据英国国家卫生与临床优化研究所(NICE)公共卫生指南制定方法(http://publications.nice.org.uk/methods-for-the-development-of-nice-public-health-guidance-third-edition-pmg4)制定的四个类别对证据质量进行判断,该网址于2012年3月访问。发现所有证据均符合最高的1级和2级这两个类别。在一个针对2012年接受初次THR的77321名患者的队列模拟模型中使用了九种相互竞争的感染控制干预措施[治疗方法(Ts)1 - 9]。对深部感染病例、总成本和QALY结局进行了预测。与T1(无全身抗生素、普通骨水泥和传统通风)基线相比,所有其他治疗策略均降低了风险。T6最有效(全身抗生素、含抗生素骨水泥和传统通风),可进一步预防1481例深部感染,并带来最大的年度成本节省和QALY最大增益。层流空气和身体排气服的额外使用表明成本更高且健康结局更差。
T6是降低THA后SSI风险的最佳策略。NHS医院中常用的其他策略会导致成本更高且QALY结局更差。因此政策制定者有机会节省资源并改善健康结局。如果政策制定者考虑减少对这些技术的投资,可能需要进一步研究层流空气和身体排气服的效果。
综合了广泛的证据来源,结论存在很大的不确定性。
英国国家卫生研究院卫生技术评估计划和昆士兰卫生质量改进与提升计划(拨款编号2008001769)。