1Department of Perioperative Medicine and Intensive Care, Karolinska University Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden, and University of Helsinki.
2Department of Emergency Care and Services, Helsinki University Hospital, and University of Helsinki.
J Neurosurg Pediatr. 2020 Oct 16;27(1):79-86. doi: 10.3171/2020.6.PEDS20189. Print 2021 Jan 1.
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a major cause of death and disability in the pediatric population. The authors assessed 1-year costs of intensive care in pediatric TBI patients.
In this retrospective multicenter cohort study of four academic ICUs in Finland, the authors used the Finnish Intensive Care Consortium database to identify children aged 0-17 years treated for TBI in ICUs between 2003 and 2013. The authors reviewed all patient health records and head CT scans for admission, treatment, and follow-up data. Patient outcomes included functional outcome (favorable outcome defined as a Glasgow Outcome Scale score of 4-5) and death within 6 months. Costs included those for the index hospitalization, rehabilitation, and social security up to 1 year after injury. To assess costs, the authors calculated the effective cost per favorable outcome (ECPFO).
In total, 293 patients were included, of whom 61% had moderate to severe TBI (Glasgow Coma Scale [GCS] score 3-12) and 40% were ≥ 13 years of age. Of all patients, 82% had a favorable outcome and 9% died within 6 months of injury. The mean cost per patient was €48,719 ($54,557) (95% CI €41,326-€56,112). The index hospitalization accounted for 66%, rehabilitation costs for 27%, and social security costs for 7% of total healthcare costs. The ECPFO was €59,727 ($66,884) (95% CI €52,335-€67,120). A higher ECPFO was observed among patients with clinical and treatment-related variables indicative of parenchymal swelling and high intracranial pressure. Lower ECPFO was observed among patients with higher admission GCS scores and those who had epidural hematomas.
Greater injury severity increases ECPFO and is associated with higher postdischarge costs in pediatric TBI patients. In this pediatric cohort, over two-thirds of all resources were spent on patients with favorable functional outcome, indicating appropriate resource allocation.
创伤性脑损伤(TBI)是儿科人群死亡和残疾的主要原因。作者评估了儿科 TBI 患者重症监护的 1 年成本。
在这项对芬兰 4 个学术 ICU 的回顾性多中心队列研究中,作者使用芬兰重症监护协会数据库,确定了 2003 年至 2013 年期间在 ICU 接受 TBI 治疗的 0-17 岁儿童。作者回顾了所有患者的病历和入院时、治疗期间和随访期间的头部 CT 扫描。患者结局包括功能结局(定义为格拉斯哥结局量表评分 4-5 的良好结局)和 6 个月内死亡。成本包括索引住院、康复和受伤后 1 年内的社会保障。为了评估成本,作者计算了每个良好结局的有效成本(ECPFO)。
共纳入 293 例患者,其中 61%有中重度 TBI(格拉斯哥昏迷量表[GCS]评分 3-12),40%年龄≥13 岁。所有患者中,82%有良好结局,9%在受伤后 6 个月内死亡。每位患者的平均费用为 48719 欧元(54557 美元)(95% CI 41326-56112 欧元)。索引住院占总医疗费用的 66%,康复费用占 27%,社会保障费用占 7%。ECPFO 为 59727 欧元(66884 美元)(95% CI 52335-57120 欧元)。临床和治疗相关变量提示存在实质肿胀和颅内压升高的患者,ECPFO 更高。入院时 GCS 评分较高和硬膜外血肿患者的 ECPFO 较低。
损伤严重程度增加 ECPFO,并与儿科 TBI 患者出院后成本增加相关。在这个儿科队列中,超过三分之二的资源用于功能结局良好的患者,表明资源分配合理。