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Surgical versus non-surgical treatment of thoracolumbar burst fractures in neurologically intact patients: A Cost-utility analysis

Many efforts have been made to determine what is the best treatment strategy for neurologically intact patients with TL burst fractures: surgery or nonoperative management. Studies comparing clinical outcomes have produced mixed and inconclusive results creating lack of consensus in the expert commu...

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Published in:The spine journal 2025-01
Main Authors: Dandurand, Charlotte, Öner, Cumhur F, Schnake, Klaus John, Bransford, Richard J, Schroeder, Greg D., Dea, Nicolas, Phillips, Mark R., Joeris, Alexander, El-Sharkawi, Mohammad, Rajasekaran, Shanmuganathan, Benneker, Lorin M., Tee, Jin W., Popescu, Eugen Cezar, Paquet, Jérôme, France, John C., Vaccaro, Alexander R., Dvorak, Marcel F
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container_title The spine journal
container_volume
creator Dandurand, Charlotte
Öner, Cumhur F
Schnake, Klaus John
Bransford, Richard J
Schroeder, Greg D.
Dea, Nicolas
Phillips, Mark R.
Joeris, Alexander
El-Sharkawi, Mohammad
Rajasekaran, Shanmuganathan
Benneker, Lorin M.
Tee, Jin W.
Popescu, Eugen Cezar
Paquet, Jérôme
France, John C.
Vaccaro, Alexander R.
Dvorak, Marcel F
description Many efforts have been made to determine what is the best treatment strategy for neurologically intact patients with TL burst fractures: surgery or nonoperative management. Studies comparing clinical outcomes have produced mixed and inconclusive results creating lack of consensus in the expert community. Therefore, it is necessary to explore other important components of healthcare such as economics to settle this controversial debate. The goal of the current study was to perform a cost-utility analysis comparing surgical treatment to nonoperative treatment for neurologically intact TL burst fractures (AOSpine classification types A3 and A4) from a societal perspective in a multicenter and international setting. We performed a cost-utility analysis from a societal perspective comparing the cost-utility of surgical treatment versus non-surgical treatment of thoracolumbar (TL) burst fractures in neurologically intact patients. Patient demographics and all clinical and outcome data were taken from an observational, prospective multicenter cohort study comparing surgical versus non-surgical treatment of TL burst fractures in neurological intact patients. The ICER was calculated comparing surgical versus non-surgical treatment for the full analysis population with a one-year time horizon, two-year time horizon as well as the working-life time horizon. Costs were taken from the clinical study, patient diaries with productivity loss documented, current scientific literature in addition to national and international healthcare costing guidelines and databases. The mean difference in cost between the two treatment groups were calculated, firstly by applying the central limit theorem, and secondly by using bootstrapping. To calculate the average cost per patient in each treatment group, the Kaplan-Meier Sample Average (KMSA) estimator was used in order to take account of the censored patients. To evaluate the derived models and to explore uncertainty, sensitivity analysis was used. Eleven sites from different regions (North America, Europe, Middle east, and Asia) completed the recruitment and follow-up for 213 patients. One hundred and thirty patients were treated surgically (61.0 %) and eighty-three patients (39.0 %) were treated non-surgically. At one-year, the ICER for surgical treatment was $191,648.00 USD per QALY. Compared to a willingness to pay threshold of $100,000, surgical treatment was not cost-effective within the one-year timeframe. At two-years, the n
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.spinee.2025.01.030
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Studies comparing clinical outcomes have produced mixed and inconclusive results creating lack of consensus in the expert community. Therefore, it is necessary to explore other important components of healthcare such as economics to settle this controversial debate. The goal of the current study was to perform a cost-utility analysis comparing surgical treatment to nonoperative treatment for neurologically intact TL burst fractures (AOSpine classification types A3 and A4) from a societal perspective in a multicenter and international setting. We performed a cost-utility analysis from a societal perspective comparing the cost-utility of surgical treatment versus non-surgical treatment of thoracolumbar (TL) burst fractures in neurologically intact patients. Patient demographics and all clinical and outcome data were taken from an observational, prospective multicenter cohort study comparing surgical versus non-surgical treatment of TL burst fractures in neurological intact patients. The ICER was calculated comparing surgical versus non-surgical treatment for the full analysis population with a one-year time horizon, two-year time horizon as well as the working-life time horizon. Costs were taken from the clinical study, patient diaries with productivity loss documented, current scientific literature in addition to national and international healthcare costing guidelines and databases. The mean difference in cost between the two treatment groups were calculated, firstly by applying the central limit theorem, and secondly by using bootstrapping. To calculate the average cost per patient in each treatment group, the Kaplan-Meier Sample Average (KMSA) estimator was used in order to take account of the censored patients. To evaluate the derived models and to explore uncertainty, sensitivity analysis was used. Eleven sites from different regions (North America, Europe, Middle east, and Asia) completed the recruitment and follow-up for 213 patients. One hundred and thirty patients were treated surgically (61.0 %) and eighty-three patients (39.0 %) were treated non-surgically. At one-year, the ICER for surgical treatment was $191,648.00 USD per QALY. Compared to a willingness to pay threshold of $100,000, surgical treatment was not cost-effective within the one-year timeframe. At two-years, the non-surgical group had visited the surgeon or general practitioner more often (0.31 vs 0.25). The non-surgical group had visited physiotherapist and other allied health more often (3.68 vs 1.68). The utilization of NSAIDs and opioids remained higher in the non-surgical group (2.66 vs 2.39) (1.52 vs 0.75). The average workdays lost remained higher in the non-surgical group (143.12 vs 114.78). The caregiver days taken off work remained higher in the non-surgical group (29.86 vs 2.39). At 2 years, surgical treatment showed to be a dominant strategy with a $28,978.50 savings per QALY. At lifetime horizon, surgical treatment remained the cost-effective strategy at $25,530.18 savings per QALY. Our cost-utility analysis showed surgical management to be cost-effective at two years compared to non-operative management in neurologically intact TL burst fractures from a societal perspective. This finding was maintained through the working-lifetime horizon. Surgical treatment became cost-effective largely due to the greater productivity loss of patients and caregivers within the non-surgical group. 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The ICER was calculated comparing surgical versus non-surgical treatment for the full analysis population with a one-year time horizon, two-year time horizon as well as the working-life time horizon. Costs were taken from the clinical study, patient diaries with productivity loss documented, current scientific literature in addition to national and international healthcare costing guidelines and databases. The mean difference in cost between the two treatment groups were calculated, firstly by applying the central limit theorem, and secondly by using bootstrapping. To calculate the average cost per patient in each treatment group, the Kaplan-Meier Sample Average (KMSA) estimator was used in order to take account of the censored patients. To evaluate the derived models and to explore uncertainty, sensitivity analysis was used. Eleven sites from different regions (North America, Europe, Middle east, and Asia) completed the recruitment and follow-up for 213 patients. One hundred and thirty patients were treated surgically (61.0 %) and eighty-three patients (39.0 %) were treated non-surgically. At one-year, the ICER for surgical treatment was $191,648.00 USD per QALY. Compared to a willingness to pay threshold of $100,000, surgical treatment was not cost-effective within the one-year timeframe. At two-years, the non-surgical group had visited the surgeon or general practitioner more often (0.31 vs 0.25). The non-surgical group had visited physiotherapist and other allied health more often (3.68 vs 1.68). The utilization of NSAIDs and opioids remained higher in the non-surgical group (2.66 vs 2.39) (1.52 vs 0.75). The average workdays lost remained higher in the non-surgical group (143.12 vs 114.78). The caregiver days taken off work remained higher in the non-surgical group (29.86 vs 2.39). At 2 years, surgical treatment showed to be a dominant strategy with a $28,978.50 savings per QALY. 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Studies comparing clinical outcomes have produced mixed and inconclusive results creating lack of consensus in the expert community. Therefore, it is necessary to explore other important components of healthcare such as economics to settle this controversial debate. The goal of the current study was to perform a cost-utility analysis comparing surgical treatment to nonoperative treatment for neurologically intact TL burst fractures (AOSpine classification types A3 and A4) from a societal perspective in a multicenter and international setting. We performed a cost-utility analysis from a societal perspective comparing the cost-utility of surgical treatment versus non-surgical treatment of thoracolumbar (TL) burst fractures in neurologically intact patients. Patient demographics and all clinical and outcome data were taken from an observational, prospective multicenter cohort study comparing surgical versus non-surgical treatment of TL burst fractures in neurological intact patients. The ICER was calculated comparing surgical versus non-surgical treatment for the full analysis population with a one-year time horizon, two-year time horizon as well as the working-life time horizon. Costs were taken from the clinical study, patient diaries with productivity loss documented, current scientific literature in addition to national and international healthcare costing guidelines and databases. The mean difference in cost between the two treatment groups were calculated, firstly by applying the central limit theorem, and secondly by using bootstrapping. To calculate the average cost per patient in each treatment group, the Kaplan-Meier Sample Average (KMSA) estimator was used in order to take account of the censored patients. To evaluate the derived models and to explore uncertainty, sensitivity analysis was used. Eleven sites from different regions (North America, Europe, Middle east, and Asia) completed the recruitment and follow-up for 213 patients. One hundred and thirty patients were treated surgically (61.0 %) and eighty-three patients (39.0 %) were treated non-surgically. At one-year, the ICER for surgical treatment was $191,648.00 USD per QALY. Compared to a willingness to pay threshold of $100,000, surgical treatment was not cost-effective within the one-year timeframe. At two-years, the non-surgical group had visited the surgeon or general practitioner more often (0.31 vs 0.25). The non-surgical group had visited physiotherapist and other allied health more often (3.68 vs 1.68). The utilization of NSAIDs and opioids remained higher in the non-surgical group (2.66 vs 2.39) (1.52 vs 0.75). The average workdays lost remained higher in the non-surgical group (143.12 vs 114.78). The caregiver days taken off work remained higher in the non-surgical group (29.86 vs 2.39). At 2 years, surgical treatment showed to be a dominant strategy with a $28,978.50 savings per QALY. At lifetime horizon, surgical treatment remained the cost-effective strategy at $25,530.18 savings per QALY. Our cost-utility analysis showed surgical management to be cost-effective at two years compared to non-operative management in neurologically intact TL burst fractures from a societal perspective. This finding was maintained through the working-lifetime horizon. Surgical treatment became cost-effective largely due to the greater productivity loss of patients and caregivers within the non-surgical group. 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subjects burst
cost-utility analysis
fractures
neurologically intact
societal perspective
thoracolumbar
title Surgical versus non-surgical treatment of thoracolumbar burst fractures in neurologically intact patients: A Cost-utility analysis
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