| Literature DB >> 23837606 |
Erzsebet Bartha1, Thomas Davidson, Thor-Henrik Brodtkorb, Per Carlsson, Sigridur Kalman.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A randomized, controlled trial, intended to include 460 patients, is currently studying peroperative goal-directed hemodynamic treatment (GDHT) of aged hip-fracture patients. Interim efficacy analysis performed on the first 100 patients was statistically uncertain; thus, the trial is continuing in accordance with the trial protocol. This raised the present investigation's main question: Is it reasonable to continue to fund the trial to decrease uncertainty? To answer this question, a previously developed probabilistic cost-effectiveness model was used. That model depicts (1) a choice between routine fluid treatment and GDHT, given uncertainty of current evidence and (2) the monetary value of further data collection to decrease uncertainty. This monetary value, that is, the expected value of perfect information (EVPI), could be used to compare future research costs. Thus, the primary aim of the present investigation was to analyze EVPI of an ongoing trial with interim efficacy observed.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23837606 PMCID: PMC3717025 DOI: 10.1186/1745-6215-14-205
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Figure 1Inclusion sequence of the first 100 randomized patients in the trial:ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01141894.
Patient characteristics and interim efficacy data; values are absolute or mean ± SD
| Number allocated | 49 | 50 |
| Age, years (mean) | 86 (± 7) | 85 ( ± 7) |
| Sex, male/female | 13/36 | 9/41 |
| American Society of Anesthesiologists’ grading (1/2/3/4) | 0/13/31/5 | 1/15/29/5 |
| Number of patients with complications (including in-hospital mortality) | 15 | 19 |
| Relative risk of GDHT compared to routine fluid treatment based on intention to treat (95% CI) | 0.806 (0.464 to 1.397) | |
CI confidence interval, GDHT goal-directed hemodynamic therapy.
Figure 2Cost-effectiveness model. A) Short-term model, the decision tree. The arrows represent the transition of the hypothetical patients towards the selected post-operative outcomes (triangles). These transitions are characterized by probability estimates (p1 to p10), costs, and health-related quality-of-life weights. For the routine fluid treatment, probability estimates were extracted from a cohort from Lund University Hospital [7]. * For goal-directed hemodynamic treatment (GDHT), the interim analysis was used. ** For mortality, published data on high-risk patients were used [8]. B) The long-term model, Markov structure. The hypothetical patients were allocated to health states characterized by health-related quality-of-life weights. During annual cycles of simulation, the patients transition in the model or stay in the same heath state. These transitions are characterized by probability estimates (p11 to p21). {AU After each cycle, quality-adjusted life-years and direct health-care costs are aggregated.
Model inputs
| Short-term clinical outcome (routine care)a | | |
| Probability of… | | |
| In-hospital mortality | 0.129 | DirichletI (52, 26, 2, 162,160) |
| Cardiovascular complications | 0.065 | |
| Stroke | 0.005 | |
| Other complications | 0.403 | |
| uncomplicated recovery | 0.398 | |
| Relative risk of mortality GDHT versus routine [ | 0.75 | Lognormal (−0.28; 0.09) |
| Relative risk of complications GDHT versus routine | 0.81 | Lognormal |
| Long-term clinical outcome (routine care) | | |
| Mortality associated with cardiovascular diseaseb | | |
| First year | 0.107 | Deterministic |
| Second year | 0.058 | Deterministic |
| Third year | 0.056 | Deterministic |
| Mortality associated with stroke at 3 monthsc | 0.15 | Deterministic |
| Mortality associated with other complicationsa | 0.18 | Beta (31; 140) |
| Recovery associated with other complicationsa | 0.41 | Beta (70; 101) |
| Mortality after recovery with other complicationsa | 0.15 | Beta (17; 95) |
| Costs/patient for routine fluid treatment in the clinical routine (€)d | | |
| Medical device for fluid treatment | 11 | Deterministic |
| Human resources in pre-operative area | 27 | Deterministic |
| Human resources during anesthesia | 117 | Deterministic |
| Costs/patient for GDHT (€)d | | |
| Medical device for GDHT | 221 | Deterministic |
| Human resources in pre-operative area | 159 | Deterministic |
| Human resources during anesthesia | 401 | Deterministic |
| Post-operative direct health-care costs/patient (€)e | | |
| Cardiovascular complications | | |
| Myocardial infarction | 7,498 | Gamma (90; 83) |
| Heart failure | 9,903 | Gamma (104;95) |
| Stroke | 7,550 | Gamma (8; 956) |
| Other complications | | |
| Pneumonia | 8,514 | Gamma (106; 81) |
| Renal failure | 12,197 | Gamma (6; 1442) |
| Wound infection | 8,566 | Gamma (218; 39) |
| Deep-vein thrombosis | 7,617 | Gamma (62; 124) |
| Pulmonary embolism | 10,190 | Gamma (17, 600) |
| Gastrointestinal bleeding | 9,900 | Gamma (64, 154) |
| Confusion | 7,961 | Gamma (866; 9) |
| Death | 9,020 | Gamma (273, 33) |
| No complications | 6,753 | Gamma (956; 7) |
| Direct health-care costs, first year after hospital stay (€)f | | |
| State after… | | |
| No complications | 147 | Deterministic |
| Cardiovascular complications | 7,673 | Deterministic |
| Stroke | 7,512 | Deterministic |
| Other complications | 7,314 | Deterministic |
| Recovery from other complications | 396 | Deterministic |
| Death | 4,837 | Deterministic |
| Direct health-care costs, 2 to 10 year after hospital stay (€)f | | |
| State after… | | |
| Cardiovascular complications | 386 | Deterministic |
| Stroke | 402 | Deterministic |
| Other complications | 396 | Deterministic |
| QALY weights, estimates [ | | |
| >80 years age | 0.74 | Beta (322; 113) |
| Recovered after other complication [ | 0.66 | Beta (227; 117) |
| Decrements of QALY weights [ | | |
| State after… | | |
| Cardiovascular complications | −0.19 | Gamma (298; 0.0006) |
| Stroke | −0.35 | Gamma (100; 0.0035) |
| Other complications | −0.15 | Gamma (100; 0.0007) |
GDHT goal-directed hemodynamic therapy, QALY quality-adjusted life years, € Euros.
I The Dirichlet distribution is a multivariate normalization of beta distribution that considers that the sum of probabilities is 1.0.
a Swedish Registry on Hip Fracture.
b Swedish National Registry on Secondary Prevention in Cardiac Intensive Care.
c Swedish National Stroke Registry.
d Karolinska University Hospital in Huddinge, Sweden.
e University Hospital in Lund, Sweden.
f Epidemiological Centre of the Swedish National Board of Health.
Probability estimates characterized each post-operative outcome (the post-operative complications as well as death).
Figure 3Incremental costs and effects (∆) of goal-directed hemodynamic treatment (GDHT) versus routine fluid therapy. The dotted line represents one threshold value of how much society would be willing to pay for 1 additional life-year with full health for each patient in the target population.
Figure 4The expected value of further information for the Swedish patient population aged >80 years with hip fracture. The expected value of perfect information (EVPI) is plotted against the willingness to pay per quality-adjusted life-year (cost-effectiveness threshold).