Edmiston Charles E, Bond-Smith Giles, Spencer Maureen, Chitnis Abhishek S, Holy Chantal E, Po-Han Chen Brian, Leaper David J
Department of Surgery, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI.
Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, UK.
Surgery. 2022 May;171(5):1320-1330. doi: 10.1016/j.surg.2021.11.034. Epub 2021 Dec 29.
Surgical site infection posthysterectomy has significant impact on patient morbidity, mortality, and health care costs. This study evaluates incidence, risk factors, and total payer costs of surgical site infection after hysterectomy in commercial, Medicare, and Medicaid populations using a nationwide claims database.
IBM MarketScan databases identified women having hysterectomy between 2014 and 2018. Deep-incisional/organ space (DI/OS) and superficial infections were identified over 6 months postoperatively with risk factors and direct infection-associated payments by insurance type over a 24-month postoperative period.
Analysis identified 141,869 women; 7.8% Medicaid, 5.8% Medicare, and 3.9% commercially insured women developed deep-incisional/organ space surgical site infection, whereas 3.9% Medicaid, 3.2% Medicare, and 2.1% commercially insured women developed superficial infection within 6 months of index procedure. Deep-incisional/organ space risk factors were open approach (hazard ratio, 1.6; 95% confidence interval, 1.5-1.8) and payer type (Medicaid versus commercial [hazard ratio, 1.4; 95% confidence interval, 1.3-1.5]); superficial risk factors were payer type (Medicaid versus commercial [hazard ratio, 1.4; 95% confidence interval, 1.3-1.6]) and solid tumor without metastasis (hazard ratio, 1.4; 95% confidence interval, 1.3-1.6). Highest payments occurred with Medicare ($44,436, 95% confidence interval: $33,967-$56,422) followed by commercial ($27,140, 95% confidence interval: $25,990-$28,317) and Medicaid patients ($17,265, 95% confidence interval: $15,247-$19,426) for deep-incisional/organ space infection at 24-month posthysterectomy.
Real-world cost of managing superficial, deep-incisional/organ space infection after hysterectomy was significantly higher than previously reported. Surgical approach, payer type, and comorbid risk factors contributed to increased risk of infection and economic burden. Medicaid patients experienced the highest risk of infection, followed by Medicare patients. The study suggests adoption of a robust evidence-based surgical care bundle to mitigate risk of surgical site infection and economic burden is warranted.
子宫切除术后手术部位感染对患者的发病率、死亡率及医疗费用有重大影响。本研究利用全国性索赔数据库评估商业保险、医疗保险和医疗补助人群子宫切除术后手术部位感染的发生率、风险因素及支付方的总费用。
IBM MarketScan数据库确定了2014年至2018年间接受子宫切除术的女性。术后6个月内确定深部切口/器官腔隙(DI/OS)感染和表浅感染,并确定术后24个月内的风险因素及按保险类型划分的与感染直接相关的支付费用。
分析纳入141,869名女性;7.8%的医疗补助女性、5.8%的医疗保险女性和3.9%的商业保险女性发生深部切口/器官腔隙手术部位感染,而3.9%的医疗补助女性、3.2%的医疗保险女性和2.1%的商业保险女性在首次手术后6个月内发生表浅感染。深部切口/器官腔隙感染的风险因素为开放手术方式(风险比,1.6;95%置信区间,1.5 - 1.8)和支付方类型(医疗补助与商业保险[风险比,1.4;95%置信区间,1.3 - 1.5]);表浅感染的风险因素为支付方类型(医疗补助与商业保险[风险比,1.4;95%置信区间,1.3 - 1.6])和无转移的实体瘤(风险比,1.4;95%置信区间,1.3 - 1.6)。子宫切除术后24个月时,医疗保险患者(44,436美元,95%置信区间:33,967 - 56,422美元)的支付费用最高,其次是商业保险患者(27,140美元,95%置信区间:25,990 - 28,317美元)和医疗补助患者(17,265美元,95%置信区间:15,247 - 19,426美元)的深部切口/器官腔隙感染费用。
子宫切除术后处理表浅、深部切口/器官腔隙感染的实际费用显著高于先前报道。手术方式、支付方类型和合并症风险因素导致感染风险和经济负担增加。医疗补助患者感染风险最高,其次是医疗保险患者。该研究表明,采用强有力的循证手术护理方案以降低手术部位感染风险和经济负担是有必要的。