Patti James C, Ore Ana Sofia, Barrows Courtney, Velanovich Vic, Moser A James
The Pancreas and Liver Institute at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, MA, USA.
Division of General Surgery, University of South Florida, Tampa, FL, USA.
Hepatobiliary Surg Nutr. 2017 Aug;6(4):246-257. doi: 10.21037/hbsn.2017.02.04.
Current healthcare economic evaluations are based only on the perspective of a single stakeholder to the healthcare delivery process. A true value-based decision incorporates all of the outcomes that could be impacted by a single episode of surgical care. We define the value proposition for robotic surgery using a stakeholder model incorporating the interests of all groups participating in the provision of healthcare services: patients, surgeons, hospitals and payers. One of the developing and expanding fields that could benefit the most from a complete value-based analysis is robotic hepatopancreaticobiliary (HPB) surgery. While initial robot purchasing costs are high, the benefits over laparoscopic surgery are considerable. Performing a literature search we found a total of 18 economic evaluations for robotic HPB surgery. We found a lack of evaluations that were carried out from a perspective that incorporates all of the impacts of a single episode of surgical care and that included a comprehensive hospital cost assessment. For distal pancreatectomies, the two most thorough examinations came to conflicting results regarding total cost savings compared to laparoscopic approaches. The most thorough pancreaticoduodenectomy evaluation found non-significant savings for total hospital costs. Robotic hepatectomies showed no cost savings over laparoscopic and only modest savings over open techniques. Lastly, robotic cholecystectomies were found to be more expensive than the gold-standard laparoscopic approach. Existing cost accounting data associated with robotic HPB surgery is incomplete and unlikely to reflect the state of this field in the future. Current data combines the learning curves for new surgical procedures being undertaken by HPB surgeons with costs derived from a market dominated by a single supplier of robotic instruments. As a result, the value proposition for stakeholders in this process cannot be defined. In order to solve this problem, future studies must incorporate (I) quality of life, survival, and return to independent function alongside data such as (II) intent-to-treat analysis of minimally-invasive surgery accounting for conversions to open, (III) surgeon and institution experience and operative time as surrogates for the learning curve; and (IV) amortization and maintenance costs as well as direct costs of disposables and instruments.
当前的医疗保健经济评估仅基于医疗保健提供过程中单一利益相关者的视角。真正基于价值的决策应纳入单次外科手术可能影响的所有结果。我们使用一个利益相关者模型来定义机器人手术的价值主张,该模型纳入了参与提供医疗服务的所有群体的利益:患者、外科医生、医院和支付方。机器人肝胰胆(HPB)手术是一个发展和扩展中的领域,可能从全面的基于价值的分析中获益最大。虽然最初的机器人购置成本很高,但与腹腔镜手术相比,其优势相当可观。通过文献检索,我们共找到18项关于机器人HPB手术的经济评估。我们发现,缺乏从纳入单次外科手术所有影响的视角进行的评估,也缺乏包含全面医院成本评估的评估。对于远端胰腺切除术,与腹腔镜手术相比,两项最全面的评估在总成本节省方面得出了相互矛盾的结果。最全面的胰十二指肠切除术评估发现,医院总成本节省不显著。机器人肝切除术与腹腔镜手术相比没有成本节省,与开放手术相比只有适度节省。最后,发现机器人胆囊切除术比金标准的腹腔镜手术更昂贵。与机器人HPB手术相关的现有成本核算数据不完整,不太可能反映该领域未来的状况。当前数据将HPB外科医生开展新手术的学习曲线与来自由单一机器人器械供应商主导的市场的成本相结合。因此,无法定义此过程中利益相关者的价值主张。为了解决这个问题,未来的研究必须纳入:(I)生活质量、生存率和恢复独立功能,以及诸如(II)对微创手术进行意向性分析,将转为开放手术的情况考虑在内,(III)外科医生和机构经验以及手术时间作为学习曲线的替代指标;以及(IV)摊销和维护成本以及一次性用品和器械的直接成本。