| Literature DB >> 24876787 |
Stefan Walzer1, Daniel Droeschel2, Mark Nuijten3, Hélène Chevrou-Séverac4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Health care decision-makers have begun to realize that medical nutrition plays an important role in the delivery of care, and it needs to be seen as a sole category within the overall health care reimbursement system to establish the value for money. Indeed, improving health through improving patients' nutrition may contribute to the cost-effectiveness and financial sustainability of health care systems. Medical nutrition is regulated by a specific bill either in Europe or in the United States, which offers specific legislations and guidelines (as provided to patients with special nutritional needs) and indications for nutritional support. Given that the efficacy of medical nutrition has been proven, one can wonder whether the heterogeneous nature of its coverage/reimbursement across countries might be due to the lack of health-related economic evidence or value-for-money of nutritional interventions. This paper aims to address this knowledge gap by performing a systematic literature review on health economics evidence regarding medical nutrition, and by summarizing the results of these publications related to the value for money of medical nutrition interventions.Entities:
Keywords: health economics; medical nutrition; systematic review
Year: 2014 PMID: 24876787 PMCID: PMC4035106 DOI: 10.2147/CEOR.S58852
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clinicoecon Outcomes Res ISSN: 1178-6981
PICO criteria used for the systematic literature search
| PICO criteria | Definition |
|---|---|
| Patient Intervention | Medical nutrition/oral or enteral formulas; FSMP; medical food; ONS; oral nutrition; enteral nutrition; total EN; nutrition/nutritional intervention; support; supplements; formulas |
| Comparison | Patients with versus those without medical nutritionals/FSMP/medical food/ONS/PN or TPN; potentially secondary prevention |
| Outcomes | Cost(s), cost-effectiveness, cost per QALY, cost saving, cost of illness, cost minimization, health economics; willingness to pay; (re)-hospitalization; morbidity and mortality; complications; utility |
Abbreviations: PICO, patient, intervention, comparison, and outcomes; FSMP, food for special medical purposes; ONS, oral nutrition supplements; EN, enteral nutrition; PN, parenteral nutrition; TPN, total parenteral nutrition; QALY, quality-adjusted life year.
Detailed overview of identified articles with respect to key study items
| Authors and reference | Disease area and classification | Intervention | Model design | Health care setting and perspective | Health economic endpoints and results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Abou-Assi et al | Acute pancreatitis | Initial 48-hour IV fluids and analgesics. | RCT in one center | Hospital perspective in the US | Average hospitalization cost: US $11,183. |
| Freijer and Nuijten | Abdominal surgery | ONS versus no ONS | Cost-effectiveness model | Hospital, national perspective | Budget impact: cost saving (in favor of ONS) of €12,986 million. |
| Gianotti et al | Surgery in GI cancer patients | Perioperative administration of enteral | Calculation based on RCT and cost data | Hospital perspective | Cost per patient: €347 (ONS) versus €103 (SoC). |
| Kruizenga et al | Malnourished hospitalized patients with different diseases | Intervention group: patients admitted to two mixed medical and surgical wards, and who received both malnutrition screening at admission and standardized nutritional care (TF and parenteral feeding). Control group received the usual hospital clinical care. | Controlled trial with a historical control group | Hospital, societal perspective | Length of stay: 11.5 days versus 14 days. |
| Neelemaat et al | Malnourished hospitalized patients (newly admitted to the wards of general internal medicine, rheumatology, gastroenterology, dermatology, nephrology, orthopedics, traumatology, and vascular surgery) | Intervention group: nutritional supplementation (energy- and protein-enriched diet, ONS, calcium-vitamin D supplement, telephone counseling by a dietician) until 3 months after discharge from hospital. Patients in the control group received usual care (control). | Randomized clinical trial in one center | Hospital, societal perspective (one hospital center) | Direct cost: €8,773 versus €8,332. |
| Norman et al | Malnourished hemodialysis patients | Oral supplementation early in the course of malnourished hemodialysis patients | RCT (pilot) study | Outpatient, hemodialysis centers in the US | Length of stay: 71 days versus 107 days versus 208 days. |
| Wilson et al | Advanced dementia | TF versus hand-feeding nursing | Retrospective cohort study | NH residents, long-term care facility in the US | Daily costs of NH care: US $4,219 (without feeding tubes) versus US $2,379 (with feeding tubes). |
| Mitchell et al | Disease-related malnutrition | ONS (intervention) versus no ONS | Budget impact | Community, national perspective | Budget impact: cost savings of €12,986 million. |
| Freijer et al | CVA | ETF in NH versus at home | Cost-utility model | Outpatient, perspective not reported | Cost/QALY (ETF at home): £12,817. |
| Elia and Stratton | Acute pancreatitis | PN versus EN | Randomized clinical trial | Hospital, health authority in Canada | Average cost per patient: US $1,375 (EN) versus US $2,608 (PN). |
| Louie et al | Lower GI tract surgery | Oral supplements (Fortisip; Nutricia Advanced Medical Nutrition Schiphol, the Netherlands) both before and after surgery. Patients were randomized to the following groups: 1) no nutritional supplements; 2) supplements both before and after surgery; 3) postoperative supplements only; 4) supplements only before surgery | Two-phase, randomized clinical trial | Hospital perspective | Total cost per patient: |
| Smedley et al | Patients after discharge from hospital | Elderly malnourished subjects were randomized to 8 weeks of supplementation (Ensure® Plus tetrapak, Abbott Laboratories, Enlive® tetrapak; Formance® Pudding; or Ensure® bars, Abbott Laboratories, Abbott Park, IL, USA) or no supplementation postdischarge, and followed up for 24 weeks | Multicenter prospective open label, RCT | Outpatient, NHS perspective | Cost changes within the study period: |
| Edington et al | 1) Well-nourished surgical patients | Immune-modulating formulations could be either: | Database analysis | Hospital (before/after surgery – after trauma/ICU admission) | Cost of complications normally higher for the intervention group (ONS). Break-even infection rates calculated to define the efficiency point for ONS treatment. |
| Strickland et al | Cancer of the stomach, pancreas, or esophagus | Randomization into two groups receiving postoperative TPN or EEN | Prospective, randomized clinical trial | Hospital, department of surgery in an Italian university hospital | Mean cost per day: $25 versus $90 (USD). |
| Braga et al | GI cancer | 1) Preoperative group receiving Oral Impact® (Nestlé SA, Canton of Vaud, Switzerland) for 5 days before surgery; 2) perioperative group receiving the same preoperative treatment plus jejunal infusion of Impact for 7 days after surgery; and 3) a conventional group | Clinical study | Hospital perspective | Total cost of nutrition: €3,407 (conventional) versus €14,729 (preoperative). |
| Braga and Gianotti | GI cancer | Preoperative IN versus no nutritional support | Review | Hospital, perspective NA | Cost of nutrition: €144–€347 versus €33–€103. |
| Braga and Rocchetti | GI cancer | Oral preoperative specialized diet versus conventional treatment (no supplementation) | Prospective, randomized clinical trial | Hospital, Italian university hospital | Mean cost per day per patient (without complications): €3,622 versus €3,588. |
| Braga et al | Critically ill patients | PN versus EN | Systematic review and cost analysis | Hospital (ICU), perspective NA | Cost savings per patient (due to EN): US $2,473. |
| Cangelosi et al | Patients with risk of disease-related malnutrition | ONS versus no ONS | Linear decision analytic model | Hospital, perspective not reported | Total cost: €1,482 versus €1,717. |
| Nuijten and Mittendorf | Malnutrition patients | Two groups of physicians were selected based on historical prescribing practice: group 1 with rare prescription of ONS and group 2 with frequent prescription of ONS (only an HEHP nutritional supplement that has a pharmaceutical status on the French market) | Observational, prospective, longitudinal, cohort study | Community, physician perspective | Length of stay: 4.3 days versus 5.6 days. |
| Arnaud- Battandier et al | GI cancer | Oral or enteral dietary supplementation with arginine, omega 3 fatty acids, and nucleotides (known as IN) | Database analysis | Hospital perspective | Cost savings per patient (in favor of IN): $3,300 (reduction in infectious complications) and $6,000 (length of hospital stay) (USD). |
| Mauskopf et al | Disease-related malnutrition | ONS | Cost review | Hospital and community perspective | Additional ONS cost for individuals: |
| Russell | Malnutrition patients | Disease-specific medical nutrition | Database-matched analysis | Community, physician perspective | Total 6-month cost per patient: £1,003. |
| Guest et al | CMPA | Treatment data and, hence, split of patient groups according to UK market data | Computer-based budget impact model | Community, perspective not reported | Total cost of managing CMA per patient (first 12 months): £1,381. |
| Sladkevicius et al | CMPA | Soy, eHF, neocate AAF based on assumptions and the literature | Decision budget impact model | Community, KELA (health insurance), patient and society | KELA’s total expenditure on clinical nutrition preparations for 1,443 new CMA sufferers is expected to fall by 34% (from €47,930–€31,666). |
| Guest and Valovirta | CMPA | Soy, eHF, AAF | Decision budget impact model | Community, publicly funded health care system | Expected 6-monthly health care cost per CMA infant: AU $1,150. |
| Guest and Nagy | CMPA | Soy, eHF, AAF | Decision budget impact model | Community health care insurers | Expected budget impact (4,382 new CMA sufferers up to 1 year of age): €11.28 million. |
| Sladkevicius and Guest | CMPA | Soy, eHF, AAF | Decision budget impact model | Community, insurer, parents/carer perspective | Expected 12-monthly cost (insurance perspective): 2,430 South African (private sector) versus 1,073 R (public sector). |
| Sladkevicius and Guest | CMPA | eHF versus AAF | Decision analytic model | Community | 12-month NHS cost: £1,853 and £3,161 per patient in the eHF and AAF groups, respectively. |
| Taylor et al | Malnutrition patients in a gastroenterology ward | Nutritional support (including oral supplements, parenteral feeding, parenteral TF) | G-DRG-relevant variables were prospectively collected | Inpatient, hospital perspective | Direct cost for 50 patients: |
| Ockenga et al | Pancreatitis | EN versus PN support | Retrospective review of preexisting database | Inpatient, hospital in the USA | No significant difference was found in terms of cost, even though meaningful: US $22,277 (TPN) versus US $16,724 (EN). Reason: most likely due to the small sample size. |
Abbreviations: IV, intravenous; EN, enteral nutrition; TPN, total parenteral nutrition; GI, gastrointestinal; ONS, oral nutritional supplements; IN, immunonutrition; SoC, standard of care; RCT, randomized controlled trial; TF, tube feeding; PN, parenteral nutrition; ICER, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; QALY, quality-adjusted life year; NH, nursing homes; CVA, cerebrovascular accident; ETF, enteral tube feeding; NHS, National Health Service; ICU, intensive care unit; EEN, early enteral nutrition; NA, not applicable; HEHP, high-energy, high-protein; GP, general practitioner; CMPA, cow’s milk protein allergy; CMA, cow’s milk allergy; eHF, extensively hydrolyzed formula; AAF, amino acid formulas; KELA, Social Insurance Institution in Finland; AU, Australian; R, rand; G-DRG, Diagnosis-related Groups Germany.