Chawla H, Nwachukwu B U, van der List J P, Eggman A A, Pearle A D, Ghomrawi H M
Hospital for Special Surgery, 535 East 70th Street, New York, NY 10021, USA.
Weill Cornell Medical College, 425 East 61st Street, New York, NY 10065, USA.
Bone Joint J. 2017 Aug;99-B(8):1028-1036. doi: 10.1302/0301-620X.99B8.BJJ-2016-1032.R1.
Patellofemoral arthroplasty (PFA) has experienced significant improvements in implant survivorship with second generation designs. This has renewed interest in PFA as an alternative to total knee arthroplasty (TKA) for younger active patients with isolated patellofemoral osteoarthritis (PF OA). We analysed the cost-effectiveness of PFA TKA for the management of isolated PF OA in the United States-based population.
We used a Markov transition state model to compare cost-effectiveness between PFA and TKA. Simulated patients were aged 60 (base case) and 50 years. Lifetime costs (2015 United States dollars), quality-adjusted life year (QALY) gains and incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) were calculated from a healthcare payer perspective. Annual rates of revision were derived from the National Joint Registry for England, Wales, Northern Ireland and the Isle of Man. Deterministic and probabilistic sensitivity analysis was performed for all parameters against a $50 000/QALY willingness to pay.
PFA was more expensive ($49 811 $46 632) but more effective (14.3 QALYs 13.3 QALYs) over a lifetime horizon. The ICER associated with the additional effectiveness of PFA was $3097. The model was mainly sensitive to utility values, with PFA remaining cost-effective when its utility exceeded that of TKA by at least 1.0%. PFA provided incremental benefits at no increased cost when annual rates of revision decreased by 24.5%.
Recent improvements in rates of implant of survival have made PFA an economically beneficial joint-preserving procedure in younger patients, delaying TKA until implant failure or tibiofemoral OA progression. The present study quantified the minimum required marginal benefit for PFA to be cost-effective compared with TKA and identified survivorship targets for PFA to become both less expensive and more effective. These benchmarks might be used to assess clinical outcomes of PFA from an economic standpoint within the United States healthcare system. Cite this article: 2017;99-B:1028-36.
随着第二代设计的出现,髌股关节置换术(PFA)在植入物存活率方面有了显著提高。这重新引发了人们对PFA的兴趣,它可作为全膝关节置换术(TKA)的替代方案,用于患有孤立性髌股骨关节炎(PF OA)的年轻活跃患者。我们分析了在美国人群中,PFA与TKA治疗孤立性PF OA的成本效益。
我们使用马尔可夫过渡状态模型来比较PFA和TKA之间的成本效益。模拟患者年龄为60岁(基础病例)和50岁。从医疗保健支付者的角度计算终身成本(2015年美元)、质量调整生命年(QALY)增益和增量成本效益比(ICER)。年度翻修率来自英格兰、威尔士、北爱尔兰和马恩岛的国家关节登记处。针对所有参数,以50000美元/QALY的支付意愿进行确定性和概率性敏感性分析。
在终身范围内,PFA成本更高(49811美元对46632美元),但效果更好(14.3个QALY对13.3个QALY)。与PFA额外疗效相关的ICER为3097美元。该模型主要对效用值敏感,当PFA的效用超过TKA至少1.0%时,PFA仍具有成本效益。当年度翻修率下降24.5%时,PFA在不增加成本的情况下提供了增量效益。
近期植入物存活率的提高使PFA成为年轻患者经济上有益的保留关节手术,将TKA推迟到植入物失败或胫股骨关节炎进展时。本研究量化了与TKA相比PFA具有成本效益所需的最低边际效益,并确定了PFA变得更便宜且更有效的存活率目标。这些基准可用于从美国医疗保健系统的经济角度评估PFA的临床结果。引用本文:2017;99 - B:1028 - 36。