Zhuang Thompson, Shapiro Lauren M, Amanatullah Derek F, Maloney William J, Kamal Robin N
VOICES Health Policy Research Center, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Stanford University, Redwood City, CA.
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA.
Curr Orthop Pract. 2022 Jul-Aug;33(4):338-346. doi: 10.1097/bco.0000000000001131. Epub 2022 May 26.
Poorly controlled diabetes mellitus (DM) increases the risk for periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) after total joint arthroplasty (TJA). While institutional protocols include hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) screening in TJA patients, the costs and benefits of routine preoperative screening have not been described.
The authors created a decision tree model to evaluate short-term costs and risk reduction for PJIs with routine screening of primary total hip arthroplasty (THA) and total knee arthroplasty (TKA) patients. Probabilities and costs were obtained from published sources. They calculated net costs and absolute risk reduction in PJI for routine screening versus no screening. The authors also performed sensitivity analyses of model inputs including probabilistic sensitivity analyses (PSAs) consisting of 10,000 Monte Carlo simulations.
In patients with DM, routine screening before THA resulted in net cost savings of $81 per patient with 286 patients needing to be screened to prevent 1 PJI, while screening before TKA incurred net additional costs of $25,810 per PJI prevented. Routine screening in patients with DM undergoing THA or TKA was cost-saving across 75.5% or 21.8% of PSA simulations, respectively. In patients with no history of DM, routine screening before THA or TKA incurred net additional costs of $24,583 or $87,873 per PJI prevented, respectively.
Routine HbA1c screening in patients with DM prior to THA with referral of patients with elevated HbA1c for glycemic optimization may prevent PJI and reduce healthcare costs. In contrast, routine screening in patients with DM prior to TKA or in patients with no history of DM is not cost-saving.
Economic Level IV.
糖尿病(DM)控制不佳会增加全关节置换术(TJA)后假体周围关节感染(PJI)的风险。虽然机构方案包括对TJA患者进行糖化血红蛋白(HbA1c)筛查,但尚未描述常规术前筛查的成本和收益。
作者创建了一个决策树模型,以评估对初次全髋关节置换术(THA)和全膝关节置换术(TKA)患者进行常规筛查时PJI的短期成本和风险降低情况。概率和成本来自已发表的资料。他们计算了常规筛查与不筛查相比的净成本和PJI的绝对风险降低。作者还对模型输入进行了敏感性分析,包括由10,000次蒙特卡洛模拟组成的概率敏感性分析(PSA)。
在糖尿病患者中,THA术前常规筛查可使每位患者节省81美元的净成本,需要筛查286例患者才能预防1例PJI,而TKA术前筛查每预防1例PJI会产生25,810美元的净额外成本。在接受THA或TKA的糖尿病患者中,常规筛查分别在75.5%或21.8%的PSA模拟中节省了成本。在无糖尿病病史的患者中,THA或TKA术前常规筛查每预防1例PJI分别产生24,583美元或87,873美元的净额外成本。
在THA术前对糖尿病患者进行常规HbA1c筛查,并将HbA1c升高的患者转诊进行血糖优化,可能预防PJI并降低医疗成本。相比之下,在TKA术前对糖尿病患者或无糖尿病病史的患者进行常规筛查并不节省成本。
经济证据四级。