Hornig Carsten, Bowry Sudhir K, Kircelli Fatih, Kendzia Dana, Apel Christian, Canaud Bernard
Fresenius Medical Care Deutschland GmbH, Global Market Access and Health Economics, Else-Kröner-Straße 1, 61352 Bad Homburg, Germany.
Dialysis-at-Crossroads (D@X) Advisory, Wilhelmstraße 9, 61231 Bad Nauheim, Germany.
J Clin Med. 2024 Oct 16;13(20):6165. doi: 10.3390/jcm13206165.
Hemobiologic reactions associated with the hemoincompatibility of extracorporeal circuit material are an undesirable and inevitable consequence of all blood-contacting medical devices, typically considered only from a clinical perspective. In hemodialysis (HD), the blood of patients undergoes repetitive (at least thrice weekly for 4 h and lifelong) exposure to different polymeric materials that activate plasmatic pathways and blood cells. There is a general agreement that hemoincompatibility reactions, although unavoidable during extracorporeal therapies, are unphysiological contributors to non-hemodynamic dialysis-induced systemic stress and need to be curtailed. Strategies to lessen the periodic and direct effects of blood interacting with artificial surfaces to stimulate numerous biological pathways have focused mainly on the development of 'more passive' materials to decrease intradialytic morbidity. The indirect implications of this phenomenon, such as its impact on the overall delivery of care, have not been considered in detail. In this article, we explore, for the first time, the potential clinical and economic consequences of hemoincompatibility from a value-based healthcare (VBHC) perspective. As the fundamental tenet of VBHC is achieving the best clinical outcomes at the lowest cost, we examine the equation from the individual perspectives of the three key stakeholders of the dialysis care delivery processes: the patient, the provider, and the payer. For the patient, sub-optimal therapy caused by hemoincompatibility results in poor quality of life and various dialysis-associated conditions involving cost-impacting adjustments to lifestyles. For the provider, the decrease in income is attributed to factors such as an increase in workload and use of resources, dissatisfaction of the patient from the services provided, loss of reimbursement and direct revenue, or an increase in doctor-nurse turnover due to the complexity of managing care (nephrology encounters a chronic workforce shortage). The payer and healthcare system incur additional costs, e.g., increased hospitalization rates, including intensive care unit admissions, and increased medications and diagnostics to counteract adverse events and complications. Thus, hemoincompatibility reactions may be relevant from a socioeconomic perspective and may need to be addressed beyond just its clinical relevance to streamline the delivery of HD in terms of payability, future sustainability, and societal repercussions. Strategies to mitigate the economic impact and address the cost-effectiveness of the hemoincompatibility of extracorporeal kidney replacement therapy are proposed to conclude this comprehensive approach.
与体外循环材料血液不相容性相关的血液生物学反应是所有接触血液的医疗设备不良且不可避免的后果,通常仅从临床角度考虑。在血液透析(HD)中,患者的血液会反复(至少每周三次,每次4小时,终身如此)接触不同的聚合材料,这些材料会激活血浆途径和血细胞。人们普遍认为,血液不相容反应虽然在体外治疗期间不可避免,但却是非血液动力学透析引起的全身应激的非生理因素,需要加以控制。减少血液与人工表面相互作用以刺激众多生物途径的周期性和直接影响的策略主要集中在开发“更具惰性”的材料以降低透析期间的发病率。这一现象的间接影响,如对整体护理提供的影响,尚未得到详细考虑。在本文中,我们首次从基于价值的医疗保健(VBHC)角度探讨血液不相容性的潜在临床和经济后果。由于VBHC的基本原则是以最低成本实现最佳临床结果,我们从透析护理提供过程的三个关键利益相关者的个体角度审视这个等式:患者、提供者和付款人。对患者而言,血液不相容导致的次优治疗会导致生活质量下降以及各种与透析相关的状况,包括对生活方式进行影响成本的调整。对提供者而言,收入减少归因于工作量增加、资源使用、患者对所提供服务的不满、报销和直接收入损失,或者由于护理管理的复杂性(肾脏病领域长期存在劳动力短缺)导致的医护人员更替增加等因素。付款人和医疗保健系统会产生额外成本,例如住院率增加,包括重症监护病房入院率增加,以及用于应对不良事件和并发症的药物和诊断费用增加。因此,血液不相容反应从社会经济角度来看可能具有相关性,可能需要在临床相关性之外加以解决,以在可支付性、未来可持续性和社会影响方面简化血液透析的提供。本文提出了减轻经济影响并解决体外肾脏替代治疗血液不相容性成本效益的策略,以总结这一全面方法。