| Literature DB >> 21575219 |
Jeffrey L Winters1, David Brown, Elisabeth Hazard, Ashok Chainani, Chester Andrzejewski.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Controlled trials have found therapeutic plasma exchange (TPE) and intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIg) infusion therapy to be equally efficacious in treating Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS). Due to increases in the price of IVIg compared to human serum albumin (HSA), used as a replacement fluid in TPE, we examined direct hospital-level expenditures for TPE and IVIg for meaningful cost-differences between these treatments.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21575219 PMCID: PMC3121582 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-11-101
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Direct hospital costs of a five-treatment inpatient course of intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIg)
| Resource | Cost * |
|---|---|
| IVIg, 0.4 g/kg (70 kg patient) × 5 infusions @ $70.22/ga | $9,830.80 |
| Direct RN labor cost (73 min × $0.79/min)b cost × 5 infusions | $474.00 |
| IVIg infusion supplies × 5 infusionsc | $25.05 |
| TOTAL COST | $10,325.05 |
a IVIg hospital cost $70.22 shown above is based on hospital contracted prices paid to manufacturers. Starting in Q1-2011 Medicare OPPS (outpatient prospective payment system) IVIg reimbursement is $73.30/gram based on average of five IVIg brands. Medicare payment rates for Q1-2011 are based on 106% of third quarter 2010 manufacturer's reported average sales price, which serves as a proxy for hospital acquisition cost, distributor mark-up and direct overhead including storage, preparation and disposal costs).
b Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). CY 2010 Labor file. RUC source for CPT 96365 and 96366. Assumes an average two-hour infusion (one unit each of CPT 96365 + CPT 96366), which utilizes 59 minutes and 14 minutes (total 73 minutes) of nurse clinical labor time. This value understates typical labor costs for a PE nurse operator, which is better approximated by the RUC value of $0.79/minute applied for therapeutic intravenous infusions; we used that higher labor rate in our cost model.
c CMS. CY 2010 Supplies file. RUC source for CPT 96365 and 96366.
Direct hospital costs of a five-treatment inpatient course of therapeutic plasma exchange (TPE)
| Resource | Cost * |
|---|---|
| Tubing set and all other supplies ($210.08)a × 5 procedures | $1,050.40 |
| Direct RN labor cost (120 min × $0.79/min)b cost × 5 procedures | $474.00 |
| Insert central venous catheter (incl. catheter kit, supplies, x-rays); hospital costsc | $750.81 |
| 5% albumin × 5 proceduresd | $1,990.00 |
| TPE equipment amortizatione × 5 procedures ($52.59/procedure) | $262.95 |
| Service contract amortizationf × 5 procedures | $110 |
| TOTAL COST | $4,638.16 |
a CMS. CY 2010 Supplies file. PEAC (Practice Expense Advisory Committee) source for CPT 36514. March 2004 update.
b CMS. CY 2010 Labor file. PEAC source for CPT 36514. March 2004 update. For PE (CPT 36514), the CMS Labor file cites a labor cost of $0.42/minute, based on an RN/LVN operator. This value understates typical labor costs for a PE nurse operator, which is better approximated by the RUC value of $0.79/minute applied for therapeutic intravenous infusions; we used that higher labor rate in our cost model.
c CMS. CY 2010 payment amount for APC 0621. (Medicare-reported true median hospital cost for insertion of non-tunneled central venous catheter or PICC line; paid under APC 0621; surgeon's fee is separately paid.)
d 40 ml/kg 5% albumin (50 ml/kg total fluid volume replacement with 80% albumin:20% saline) × 70 kg patient × 5 procedures = 14,000 ml = 56 vials of 250 ml 5% albumin × $35.53/vial = $1,990 Albumin cost of $35.53 per vial represents the January 2011 provider contracted acquisition cost. Medicare payment rate is set at 95% of AWP for albumin, which serves as a proxy for hospital acquisition cost, distributor mark-up and direct overhead including storage, preparation and disposal costs.
e CMS. CPEP equipment file, March 2004 update (most recent data). Includes cell separator system, blood warmer and medical recliner chair, with useful lives of 6, 7 and 10 years (200 procedures per year) and costs of $59,320, $3,840 and $829, respectively.
f $4,450 annually per cell separator system (CaridianBCT device); assumes 200 procedures per year per device.
Basic assumptions applied regarding therapeutic plasma exchange and intravenous immunoglobulin infusion treatment regimens in study
| Therapeutic Plasma Exchange (TPE) | Intravenous immunoglobulin infusion (IVIg) |
|---|---|
| • Five plasma exchanges totaling 250 ml/kg total plasma volume replacement | • 5 IVIg infusions totaling 2.0 g/kg |
Side-effect profiles of intravenous immunoglobulin infusion and therapeutic plasma exchange
| Fever | Fever |
| Facial flushing | Paresthesias due to hypocalcemia |
| Malaise | Hematoma at site of vascular access |
| Headache | Bleeding at site of vascular access |
| Chills | Muscle cramping due to hypocalcemia |
| Myalgia | Nausea |
| Fatigue | Vomiting |
| Dyspnea | Pallor |
| Back Pain | Diaphoresis |
| Abdominal pain | Hypotension |
| Nausea | Tachycardia |
| Vomiting | Urticaria |
| Diarrhea | Pruritis |
| Hypotension | Hypofibrinogenemia |
| Tachycardia | |
| Urticaria | |
| Pruritis | |
| Pseudohyponatremia | |
| Anaphylaxis | Anaphylaxis |
| Acute renal failure | Air embolism |
| Thromboembolic events | Arrhythmia |
| Stroke | Hemolysis |
| Myocardial infarction | Thrombocytopenia |
| Deep venous thrombosis | Transfusion Related Acute Lung Injury |
| Aseptic meningitis | Pneumothorax due to central line |
| Progressive neurodegeneration | Hemothorax due to central line |
| Serum sickness | Tetany |
| Hemolysis | |
| Neutropenia | |
| Transfusion Related Acute Lung Injury | |
| Uveitis | |
| Leukocytoclastic vasculitis | |
| Erythema multiforme |
Neurologic diseases treated with both intravenous immunoglobulin infusion and therapeutic plasma exchange
| Neurologic Disease | ||
|---|---|---|
| Acute inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (AIDP, Guillain-Barré syndrome) | Definite | First line therapy with a strong recommendation and high-quality evidence. (Category I, Recommendation grade 1A) |
| Chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (CIDP) | Definite | First line therapy with a strong recommendation and moderate quality evidence. (Category I, Recommendation grade 1B) |
| Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome (LEMS) | Probable | Second line therapy with a weak recommendation and low quality or very low quality evidence. (Category II, Recommendation grade 2C) |
| IgM anti-myelin associated glycoprotein paraprotein associated peripheral neuropathy | Probable | First line therapy with a strong recommendation and low quality or very low quality evidence. (Category I, Recommendation grade 1C) |
| Myasthenia gravis (MG) | Probable | First line therapy with a strong recommendation and high-quality evidence. (Category I, Recommendation grade 1A) |
| Multiple sclerosis (MS) | Possible | Second line therapy with a strong recommendation and moderate quality evidence. (Category II, Recommendation grade 1B) |
| Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM) | Possible | Second line therapy with a weak recommendation and moderate quality evidence. (Category II, Recommendation grade 2C) |