Icahn School of Medicine, Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, New York, USA.
Icahn School of Medicine, Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, New York, USA; Centre for Health Policy and Management, Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland.
J Pain Symptom Manage. 2018 Jun;55(6):1452-1458. doi: 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2018.03.005. Epub 2018 Mar 8.
Palliative radiation therapy (PRT) is a highly effective treatment in alleviating symptoms from bone metastases; however, currently used standard fractionation schedules can lead to costly care, especially when patients are treated in an inpatient setting. The Palliative Radiation Oncology Consult (PROC) service was developed in 2013 to improve appropriateness, timeliness, and care value from PRT.
Our primary objective was to compare total costs among two cohorts of inpatients with bone metastases treated with PRT before, or after, PROC establishment. Secondarily, we evaluated drivers of cost savings including hospital length of stay, utilization of specialty-care palliative services, and PRT schedules.
Patients were included in our observational cohort study if they received PRT for bone metastases at a single tertiary care hospital from 2010 to 2016. We compared total costs and length of stay using propensity score-adjusted analyses. Palliative care utilization and PRT schedules were compared by χ and Mann-Whitney U tests.
We identified 181 inpatients, 76 treated before and 105 treated after PROC. Median total hospitalization cost was $76,792 (range $6380-$346,296) for patients treated before PROC and $50,582 (range $7585-$620,943) for patients treated after PROC. This amounted to an average savings of $20,719 in total hospitalization costs (95% CI [$3687, $37,750]). In addition, PROC was associated with shorter PRT schedules, increased palliative care utilization, and an 8.5 days reduction in hospital stay (95% CI [3.2,14]).
The PROC service, a radiation oncology model integrating palliative care practice, was associated with cost-savings, shorter treatment courses and hospitalizations, and increased palliative care.
姑息性放疗(PRT)是缓解骨转移症状的一种非常有效的治疗方法;然而,目前使用的标准分割方案可能导致昂贵的治疗费用,尤其是当患者在住院环境中接受治疗时。姑息性放射肿瘤学咨询(PROC)服务于 2013 年成立,旨在提高 PRT 的适宜性、及时性和护理价值。
我们的主要目的是比较两组接受 PRT 治疗的骨转移住院患者在 PROC 建立前后的总费用。其次,我们评估了节省成本的驱动因素,包括住院时间、专科姑息治疗服务的利用情况以及 PRT 方案。
我们将在 2010 年至 2016 年期间在一家三级保健医院接受 PRT 治疗骨转移的患者纳入我们的观察性队列研究。我们使用倾向评分调整分析比较了总费用和住院时间。使用 χ 和曼-惠特尼 U 检验比较姑息治疗的利用和 PRT 方案。
我们确定了 181 名住院患者,76 名患者在 PROC 治疗前,105 名患者在 PROC 治疗后。PROC 治疗前患者的中位总住院费用为 76792 美元(范围 6380-346296 美元),PROC 治疗后患者的中位总住院费用为 50582 美元(范围 7585-620943 美元)。这相当于总住院费用平均节省 20719 美元(95%置信区间[3687,37750])。此外,PROC 与更短的 PRT 方案、增加的姑息治疗利用以及住院时间缩短 8.5 天相关(95%置信区间[3.2,14])。
PROC 服务是一种整合姑息治疗实践的放射肿瘤学模式,与成本节约、缩短治疗疗程和住院时间以及增加姑息治疗相关。