| Literature DB >> 25091223 |
Qian Gu1, Lane Koenig, Richard C Mather, John Tongue.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A hip fracture is a debilitating condition that consumes significant resources in the United States. Surgical treatment of hip fractures can achieve better survival and functional outcomes than nonoperative treatment, but less is known about its economic benefits. QUESTIONS/PURPOSES: We asked: (1) Are the societal benefits of hip fracture surgery enough to offset the direct medical costs? (2) Nationally, what are the total lifetime benefits of hip fracture surgery for a cohort of patients and to whom do these benefits accrue?Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25091223 PMCID: PMC4182375 DOI: 10.1007/s11999-014-3820-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Orthop Relat Res ISSN: 0009-921X Impact factor: 4.176
Fig. 1A–B(A) A decision tree shows the treatment pathway and health states in the Markov model of hip fractures. The surgical branch of intracapsular fractures consists of four health states: dead, well, infection revision, and aseptic revision (infection and aseptic revisions are represented by one oval in the figure). In the first year after surgery, living patients enter the well state. The well state includes good and fair outcomes. For patients in the well state, they can die, stay in that health state, or have a revision surgery in the subsequent year. The nonoperative branch consists of three states: dead, survive - immobile, and survive - mobile. Once patients enter either survive - immobile or survive - mobile, they stay there until they die. (B) The surgical branch of extracapsular fractures consists of five health states: dead, well, conversion to arthroplasty, infection revision arthroplasty, and aseptic revision arthroplasty (infection and aseptic revisions are represented by one oval in the figure). The well state includes good and fair outcomes, because distribution and utility data for these separate health states were unavailable for extracapsular fracture. Patients can die, do well, or undergo conversion surgery to arthroplasty during the first year. For patients who had a conversion to arthroplasty, they can die, stay in that state, or have a revision arthroplasty in the subsequent year. The nonoperative branch consists of three states: dead, survive - immobile, and survive - mobile. Once patients enter either survive - immobile or survive - mobile, they stay there until they die.
Clinical parameters and utilities in base Markov model
| Clinical parameters/utilities | Displaced intracapsular fractures | Extracapsular fractures | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hemiarthroplasty | THA | Nonoperative | Sliding hip screw | Gamma nail | Nonoperative | |
| Clinical parameter | ||||||
| First-year mortality | 3.07 × natural mortality [ | 3.07 × natural mortality [ | 1.33 × 3.07 × natural mortality [ | 3.07 × natural mortality [ | 3.07 × natural mortality [ | 1.33 × 3.07 × natural mortality [ |
| Second-year mortality | 1.87 × natural mortality [ | 1.87 × natural mortality [ | 1.33 × 1.87 × natural mortality [ | 1.87 × natural mortality [ | 1.87 × natural mortality [ | 1.33 ×1.87 × natural mortality [ |
| Rate of conversion to arthroplasty | 0.04 [ | 0.06 [ | NA | |||
| Annual rate of revision arthroplasty - aseptic | 0.034 [ | 0.0067 [ | NA | 0.0067 [ | 0.0067 [ | NA |
| Annual rate of revision arthroplasty - infection | 0.0053 [ | 0.0033 [ | NA | 0.0033 [ | 0.0033 [ | NA |
| Surgical mortality of revision arthroplasty - aseptic | 0.012 [ | 0.012 [ | NA | 0.012 [ | 0.012 [ | NA |
| Surgical mortality of revision arthroplasty - infection | 0.0193 [ | 0.0193 [ | NA | 0.0193 [ | 0.0193 [ | NA |
| Probability of mobility if survive | NA | NA | 0.5 [ | NA | NA | 0.5 [ |
| Utility | ||||||
| Dead | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Well | 0.66 [ | 0.7 [ | NA | 0.54 [ | 0.54 [ | NA |
| Conversion to arthroplasty | 0.54 [ | 0.54 [ | NA | |||
| Revision arthroplasty - aseptic | 0.66 [ | 0.7 [ | NA | 0.54 [ | 0.54 [ | NA |
| Revision arthroplasty - infection | 0.39 [ | 0.39 [ | NA | 0.38 [ | 0.38 [ | NA |
| Survive - mobile | NA | NA | 0.39 [E] | NA | NA | 0.38 [ |
| Survive - immobile | NA | NA | 0 [ | NA | NA | 0 [ |
| Disutility - internal fixation | −0.15 [ | −0.15 [ | NA | |||
| Disutility - initial arthroplasty | −0.15 [ | −0.15 [ | NA | −0.15 [ | −0.15 [ | NA |
| Disutility - revision arthroplasty | −0.2 [ | −0.2 [ | NA | −0.2 [ | −0.2 [ | NA |
Numbers in brackets indicate the source of information (ie, reference number of studies cited); E = expert opinion; NA = results not affected by parameter.
Sensitivity analysis of all model parameters*
| Parameter | Value in base model | Value range tested | Range of incremental saving (USD) | Range of incremental QALY | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intracapdsular | Extracapsular | Intracapsular | Extracapsular | |||
| Rate of long-term nursing home use within immobile patients after nonsurgical treatment | 0.9 | 0.45–1 | −16,178 to 109,640 | −9704 to 116,113 | NA | NA |
| Rate of long-term nursing home use within surgically treated patients and mobile patients after nonsurgical treatment | 0.243/0.481 (age 75–84 years/85+ years) | 0.122/0.241–0.365/0.722 | 136,709–36,539 | 140,593–45,617 | NA | NA |
| Rate of being mobile after nonsurgical treatment | 0.5 | 0.25–0.75 | 148,883–24,644 | 155,356–31,118 | 3.7–2.4 | 2.9–1.7 |
| Annual costs of nursing home (USD) | 74,498 | 37,249–111,747 | 33,850–139,677 | 37,726–148,747 | NA | NA |
| Annual long-term medical costs after surgical treatment (USD) | 12,941 | 6471–14,790 | −128,658–74,790 | 134,326–81,494 | NA | NA |
| Annual long-term medical costs after nonsurgical treatment (USD) | 14,790 | 12,941–22,185 | 75,861–130,364 | 82,335–136,838 | NA | NA |
| Direct medical costs associated with surgical treatment (USD) | Note 1 | 0.5–1.5 × base value | 118,264–55,264 | 121,835–64,639 | NA | NA |
| Direct medical costs associated with nonsurgical treatment (USD) | Note 2 | 0.5–1.5 × base value | 66,441–107,086 | 75,982–110,491 | NA | NA |
| One-time home modification cost (USD) | 349 | 175–524 | 86,821–86,706 | 93,295–93,180 | NA | NA |
| Ratio of all-cause mortality of nonsurgical group to surgical group in the first 2 years | 1.33 | 1.04–1.71 | 114,824–51,559 | 121,297–58,033 | 3.0–3.2 | 2.2–2.5 |
| Ratio of all-cause mortality of surgical group to general population in the first 2 years | 3.07/1.87 (1st/2nd year) | 1.5/1–4.6/2.8 | 116,597–59,962 | 125,075–64,529 | 3.4–2.7 | 2.6–2.1 |
| Number of years of excess mortality (compared with general population) persists (Note 3) | 2 | 3–10 | 84,438–75,845 | 90,459–79,906 | 2.9–2.6 | 2.3–1.9 |
| Rate of conversion to arthroplasty (extracapsular only) | 0.06 | 0.03–0.09 | NA | 93,864–92,610 | NA | 2.3–2.3 |
| Annual rate of revision arthroplasty (aseptic and infection) | Note 4 | 0.5–1.5 × base value | 93,525–81,322 | 93,412–93,071 | 3.1–3.0 | 2.3–2.3 |
| Mortality of revision arthroplasty (aspetic and infection) | 0.012/0.0193(aseptic/infection) | 0.006/0.0097–0.018/0.029 | 86,408–87,120 | 92,567–93,873 | 3.2–3.2 | 2.3–2.3 |
| Utility of being immobile after nonsurgical treatment | 0 | 0–0.2 | NA | NA | 3.1–2.4 | 2.3–1.7 |
| Utility of being mobile after nonsurgical treatment | 0.39/0.38 (intracapsular/extracapsular) | 0.2–0.55 | NA | NA | 3.6–2.6 | 2.9–1.8 |
| All disutilities associated with surgery | Note 5 | 0.5–1.5 × base value | NA | NA | 3.1–3.0 | 2.4–2.3 |
| Utility of being well after surgery (intracapsular) | 0.66 | 0.55–0.79 | NA | NA | 2.3–3.9 | NA |
| Utility of being well after surgery (extracapsular) | 0.54 | 0.38–0.66 | NA | NA | NA | 1.3–3.1 |
| Utility after infection revision | 0.39/0.38 (intracapsular/extracapsular) | 0.2–0.55 | NA | NA | 3.0–3.1 | 2.3–2.3 |
* Sensitivity analysis was performed for an 80-year-old patient receiving either hemiarthroplasty for intracapsular fracture or internal fixation with A Gamma nail for extracapsular fracture. Total savings are net savings in direct medical costs, long-term medical costs, nursing home costs, and home modification costs from surgical treatment relative to nonsurgical treatment. Value range tested was determined either based on literature or 50% higher and lower than value in base model when reasonable range was not available in literature. In some cases, the upper limit or lower limit or both were capped at a certain value to avoid unreasonable parameter assumptions. Note 1 = including direct medical costs of hemiarthroplasty (USD 52,126), THA (USD 49,207), internal fixation (USD 54,054), and revision arthroplasty (USD 44,784); Note 2 = direct medical costs associated with nonsurgical treatment are USD 40,795 for intracapsular and USD 34,509 for extracapsular fractures under the base scenario; Note 3 = for both groups, the annual mortality beyond the second year was set at 1.7 × natural mortality, based on published data [13]; Note 4 = 0.034/0.0053 (aseptic/infection) after hemiarthroplasty and 0.0067/0.0033 (aseptic/infection) after conversion to arthroplasty from internal fixation; Note 5 = including disutility associated with initial hemiarthroplasty/THA and internal fixation (−0.15) and revision arthroplasty (−0.2); QALY = quality-adjusted life year; NA = results not affected by change in parameter.
Average direct medical costs for 6 months after hip fractures
| Type of fracture | Treatment | Average direct medical cost (USD)* |
|---|---|---|
| Intracapsular | Hemiarthroplasty | 52,126 |
| Intracapsular | THA | 49,207 |
| Intracapsular | Nonsurgical treatment | 40,795 |
| Extracapsular | Internal fixation | 54,054 |
| Extracapsular | Nonsurgical treatment | 34,509 |
| Both | Revision hip arthroplasty | 44,784 |
We analyzed 5% sample of 2009 Medicare inpatient claims; ICD-9 diagnosis codes 820.0x and 820.1x were used to identify patients with intracapsular fractures and 820.2x and 820.3x for extracapsular fractures. The following ICD-9 procedure codes were used to identify relevant procedures: 81.51 (THA), 81.52 (hemiarthroplasty), 79.35 (open reduction and internal fixation), 81.53 and 00.70 to 00.73 (revision hip arthroplasty); *cost estimates were risk-standardized for age, sex, and comorbidities and adjusted to reflect different reimbursement rates across payers (eg, private, Medicare, Medicaid, self-insured, and uninsured); estimates include all medical costs (facility and physician fees) across all care settings (including readmissions to hospital, outpatient, and postacute care facilities) from the index hospitalization to 6 months after discharge from the index hospitalization; all costs are expressed in 2009 USD.
Societal savings and additional QALYs from surgical treatment of hip fractures
| Age group | Societal savings (Δ USD* surgical relative to nonsurgical) | Δ QALY | ICER (Δ USD*/ΔQALY) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| From direct medical costs | From long-term medical costs | From nursing home costs | From home modification costs | Total savings | |||
| A | B | C | D | E | F | E/F | |
| Intracapsular fractures | |||||||
| 65–69 years | −28,006 | 18,811 | 312,781 | −129 | 303,458 | 6.1 | Dominant |
| 70–79 years | −23,941 | 8993 | 176,688 | −120 | 161,620 | 4.2 | Dominant |
| 80–89 years | −18,914 | −705 | 49,635 | −93 | 29,923 | 2.2 | Dominant |
| 90+ years | −14,896 | −3336 | 5905 | −73 | −12,400 | 0.8 | 19,544 |
| Overall | −19,710 | 1969 | 83,118 | −97 | 65,279 | 2.5 | Dominant |
| Extracapsular fractures | |||||||
| 65–69 years | −22,447 | 21,451 | 318,329 | −129 | 317,203 | 4.6 | Dominant |
| 70–79 years | −22,380 | 10,901 | 181,982 | −120 | 170,383 | 3.1 | Dominant |
| 80–89 years | −22,305 | 378 | 53,922 | −93 | 31,902 | 1.6 | Dominant |
| 90+ | −22,244 | −2892 | 7675 | −73 | −17,533 | 0.6 | 37,073 |
| Overall | −22,317 | 3190 | 87,188 | −97 | 67,964 | 1.9 | Dominant |
Values are estimated relative to nonsurgical treatments; Column E is calculated as the sum of columns A through D; negative values in E (negative savings) represent increases in societal costs; savings by age groups were weighted by age distribution of the patient population to reach overall savings; all savings are expressed in 2009 USD; QALY = quality-adjusted life year; ICER = incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, calculated using differences in total costs.