School of Biomedical Engineering, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Department of Orthopaedics, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2023 Jan 1;481(1):157-173. doi: 10.1097/CORR.0000000000002375. Epub 2022 Sep 8.
Robotic, navigated, and patient-specific instrumentation (PSI) TKA procedures have been introduced to improve component placement precision and improve implant survivorship and other clinical outcomes. However, the best available evidence has shown that these technologies are ineffective in reducing revision rates in the general TKA patient population. Nonetheless, it seems plausible that these technologies could be an effective and cost-effective means of reducing revision risk in clinical populations that are at an elevated risk of revision because of patient-specific demographics (such as older age at index surgery, elevated BMI, and being a man). Since clinical trials on this topic would need to be very large, a simulation approach could provide insight on which clinical populations would be the most promising for analysis.
QUESTIONS/PURPOSES: We conducted a simulation-based analysis and asked: (1) Given key demographic parameters characterizing a patient population, together with estimates of the precision achievable with selected forms of technology assistance in TKA, can we estimate the expected distributions of anticipated reductions in lifetime revision risk for that population and the associated improvements in quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) that would be expected to result? (2) Are there realistic practice characteristics (such as combinations of local patient demographics and capital and per-procedure costs) for which applying a per-patient risk-prioritized policy for using technology-assisted TKA could be considered cost-effective based on projected cost savings from reductions in revision rates?
We designed simulations of hypothetical practice-specific clinical scenarios, each characterized by patient volume, patient demographics, and technology-assisted surgical technique, using demographic information drawn from other studies to characterize two contrasting simulated clinical scenarios in which the distributions of factors describing patients undergoing TKA place one population at a comparatively elevated risk of revision (elevated-risk population) and the second at a comparatively reduced risk of revision (lower-risk population). We used results from previous systematic reviews and meta-analyses to estimate the implant precision in coronal plane alignment for patient-specific instrumentation, navigated, and robotic technology. We generated simulated TKA patient populations based on risk estimates from large clinical studies, structured reviews, and meta-analyses and calculated the patient-specific reduction in the revision risk and the change in QALYs attributable to the technology-assisted intervention in each of the two simulated clinical scenarios. We also incorporated a sensitivity analysis, incorporating variations in the effect size of deviations from overall coronal alignment on revision risk and difference in health state utilities acquired through a structured review process. We then simulated the outcomes of 25,000 operations per patient using the precisions associated with the conventional TKA technique, the three technology-assisted techniques, and a hypothetical technology-assisted intervention that could consistently deliver perfectly neutral overall coronal alignment, which is unachievable in practice. A risk-prioritized treatment policy was emulated by ordering the simulated patients from the highest to lowest predicted increase in QALYs, such that simulated patients who would see the greatest increase in the QALYs (and therefore the greatest reduction in lifetime revision risk) were the patients to receive technology-assisted TKA intervention in a practice. We used cost estimates acquired through a structured review process and calculated the net added costs of each of the three technology-assisted techniques as a function of the percent utilization (proportion of patients treated with technology assistance in a practice), factoring in fixed costs, per-procedure variable costs, and savings occurring from the prevention of future revision surgery. Finally, we calculated the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) and marginal cost-effectiveness ratio (MCER) for each technology-assisted technique for the two clinical scenarios. We then used a Monte Carlo approach to simulate variations in key patient risk, health state, and economic factors as well as to obtain a distribution of estimates for cost-effectiveness. We considered an intervention to be cost effective if either the ICER or MCER values were below USD/QALY 63,000.
For the lower-risk population, the median reduction in the revision risk was 0.9% (0.4% to 2.2%, extrema from the sensitivity analysis) and 1.8% (0.9% to 4.4%) for PSI and robotic TKA, respectively, and 1.9% (1.0% to 4.6%) for ideal TKA. In contrast, the median reduction in the revision risk in the elevated-risk clinical scenario was 2.0% (1.2% to 3.4%) and 4.6% (2.7% to 8.5%) for PSI and robotic TKA and 5.1% (3.0% to 9.4%) for ideal TKA. Estimated differences in the cumulative gain in QALYs attributable to technology-assisted TKA ranged from 0.6 (0.2 to 1.8) to 4.0 (1.8 to 10.0) QALYs per 100 patients, depending on the intervention type and clinical scenario. For PSI, we found treating 15% of patients in the lower-risk population and 77% in the elevated-risk population could meet the threshold for being considered cost effective. For navigated TKA systems offering high alignment precision, we found the intervention could meet this threshold for practice sizes of at least 300 patients per year and a percent utilization of 27% in the lower-risk population. In the elevated-risk population, cost-effectiveness could be achieved in practice volumes as small as 100 patients per year with a percent utilization of at least 6%, and cost savings could be achieved with a percent utilization of at least 45%. We found that robotic TKA could only meet the threshold for being considered cost-effectiveness in the lower-risk population if yearly patient volumes exceeded 600 and for a limited range of percent utilization (27% to 32%). However, in the elevated-risk patient population, robotic TKA with high alignment precision could potentially be cost effective for practice sizes as small as 100 patients per year and a percent utilization of at least 20% if a risk-prioritized treatment protocol were used.
Based on these simulations, a selective-use policy for technology-assisted TKA that prioritizes using technology assistance for those patients at a higher risk of revision based on patient-specific factors could potentially meet the cost-effectiveness threshold in selected circumstances (for example, primarily in elevated-risk populations and larger practice sizes). Whether it does meet that threshold would depend significantly on the surgical precision that can be achieved in practice for a given proposed technology as well as on the true local costs of using the proposed technology. We further recommend that any future randomized trials seeking to demonstrate possible effects of technology assistance on revision risk focus on clinical populations that are at higher risk of revision (such as, patient populations that are relatively younger, have higher BMIs, and higher proportions of men).
This study suggests that technology assistance is only likely to prove cost effective in selected circumstances rather than in all clinical populations and practice settings. In general, we project that surgical navigation is most likely to prove cost effective in the widest range of circumstances, that PSI may be cost effective or cost neutral in a moderate range of circumstances, and that robotic surgery is only likely to be cost effective in moderately large practices containing patients who are on average at an intrinsically elevated risk of revision.
机器人、导航和患者特定仪器(PSI)TKA 手术已被引入,以提高组件放置精度,并提高植入物存活率和其他临床结果。然而,最好的现有证据表明,这些技术在降低普通 TKA 患者人群的翻修率方面无效。尽管如此,似乎这些技术可以通过降低特定于患者的人口统计学因素(如索引手术时年龄较大、BMI 较高和男性)而导致翻修风险升高的临床人群的风险,成为一种有效且具有成本效益的方法。由于关于这个主题的临床试验需要非常大,模拟方法可以提供关于哪些临床人群最有希望进行分析的见解。
问题/目的:我们进行了一项基于模拟的分析,并提出了以下问题:(1)给定描述患者人群的关键人口统计学参数,以及在 TKA 中使用特定形式的技术辅助实现的精度估计,我们能否估计该人群预期的预期寿命降低风险的预期分布,以及由此产生的预期质量调整生命年(QALYs)的改善?(2)是否存在现实的实践特征(例如,当地患者人口统计学和资本与每例手术成本的组合),可以根据降低翻修率的预期成本节省来考虑应用基于风险的患者优先使用技术辅助 TKA 的政策是具有成本效益的?
我们设计了模拟特定于实践的临床场景的模拟,每个场景都由患者数量、患者人口统计学和技术辅助手术技术来描述,使用从其他研究中提取的人口统计学信息来描述两种对比模拟的临床场景,其中一种场景中描述患者接受 TKA 的因素分布将一种人群置于相对较高的翻修风险(高危人群),另一种场景则将人群置于相对较低的翻修风险(低危人群)。我们使用来自大型临床研究、系统评价和荟萃分析的结果来估计患者特定仪器、导航和机器人技术的冠状面对准精度。我们根据来自大型临床研究、结构审查和荟萃分析的风险估计,生成基于风险的 TKA 患者人群,并计算在两种模拟临床场景中的每一种中,技术辅助干预对患者特定的翻修风险降低和健康状态效用的变化的影响。我们还进行了敏感性分析,其中包括整体冠状对准偏差对翻修风险的影响大小和通过结构化审查过程获得的健康状态效用的差异的变化。然后,我们使用与常规 TKA 技术相关的精度,对三种技术辅助技术和一种假设的技术辅助干预进行了 25,000 次手术模拟,该干预可以始终提供中性的整体冠状对准,这在实践中是无法实现的。通过模拟患者从最高到最低的 QALY 预测增加量来模拟风险优先的治疗策略,即接受技术辅助 TKA 干预的患者是那些预期 QALY 增加最大(因此预期寿命翻修风险降低最大)的患者。我们使用通过结构化审查过程获得的成本估计,并根据使用技术辅助的实践中的患者比例(接受技术辅助治疗的患者比例)计算了三种技术辅助技术的净附加成本,考虑了固定成本、每例手术的可变成本以及通过预防未来翻修手术而节省的成本。最后,我们为两种临床场景计算了每种技术辅助技术的增量成本效益比(ICER)和边际成本效益比(MCER)。然后,我们使用蒙特卡罗方法模拟了关键患者风险、健康状态和经济因素的变化,并获得了成本效益的分布估计。如果 ICER 或 MCER 值低于 63,000 美元/QALY,我们就认为干预具有成本效益。
对于低危人群,PSI 和机器人 TKA 的翻修风险降低中位数分别为 0.9%(0.4%至 2.2%,敏感性分析的极值)和 1.8%(0.9%至 4.4%),而理想 TKA 的翻修风险降低中位数为 1.9%(1.0%至 4.6%)。相比之下,在高危临床场景中,PSI 和机器人 TKA 的翻修风险降低中位数分别为 2.0%(1.2%至 3.4%)和 4.6%(2.7%至 8.5%),理想 TKA 的翻修风险降低中位数为 5.1%(3.0%至 9.4%)。归因于 TKA 技术辅助的累积 QALY 增益差异估计值范围为 0.6(0.2 至 1.8)至 4.0(1.8 至 10.0)QALYs/100 例,具体取决于干预类型和临床场景。对于 PSI,我们发现治疗低危人群中的 15%和高危人群中的 77%的患者可以满足被认为是具有成本效益的阈值。对于提供高精度对准的导航 TKA 系统,我们发现该干预措施可以在每年至少 300 例患者和高危人群中 27%的利用率下达到这一阈值。在高危人群中,即使每年的患者数量仅为 100 例,利用率至少为 6%,也可以实现成本效益,并且如果利用率至少为 45%,则可以节省成本。我们发现,机器人 TKA 只有在每年患者数量超过 600 例且利用率在 27%至 32%之间的情况下,才能在低危人群中满足具有成本效益的阈值。然而,在高危患者人群中,如果使用风险优先的治疗方案,具有高精度对准的机器人 TKA 每年可治疗 100 例患者,利用率至少为 20%,并且具有成本效益。
根据这些模拟结果,如果基于患者特定因素,将技术辅助 TKA 的选择性使用策略优先用于那些翻修风险较高的患者,那么在某些情况下(例如,主要在高危人群和较大的实践规模中),该策略可能符合成本效益的阈值。它是否符合该阈值在很大程度上取决于给定拟议技术在实践中可以实现的手术精度以及拟议技术的实际使用成本。我们进一步建议,任何旨在证明技术辅助对翻修风险的可能影响的未来随机试验都应侧重于具有较高翻修风险的临床人群(例如,相对较年轻、BMI 较高和男性比例较高的患者人群)。
本研究表明,技术辅助仅可能在某些情况下具有成本效益,而不是在所有临床人群和实践环境中都具有成本效益。一般来说,我们预计手术导航最有可能在最广泛的情况下具有成本效益,PSI 可能在中等范围内具有成本效益或成本中性,而机器人手术仅可能在中等规模的实践中具有成本效益,其中患者平均具有内在较高的翻修风险。