| Literature DB >> 26818197 |
Andrew Cleves1, Paul Dimmock2, Neil Hewitt2, Grace Carolan-Rees3.
Abstract
The transurethral resection in saline (TURis) system was notified by the company Olympus Medical to the National Institute of Health and Care Excellence's (NICE's) Medical Technologies Evaluation Programme. Following selection for medical technologies guidance, the company developed a submission of clinical and economic evidence for evaluation. TURis is a bipolar surgical system for treating men with lower urinary tract symptoms due to benign prostatic enlargement. The comparator is any monopolar transurethral resection of the prostate (mTURP) system. Cedar, a collaboration between Cardiff and Vale University Health Board, Cardiff University and Swansea University in the UK, acted as an External Assessment Centre (EAC) for NICE to independently critique the company's submission of evidence. Eight randomised trials provided evidence for TURis, demonstrating efficacy equivalent to that of mTURP for improvement of symptoms. The company presented meta-analyses of key outcome measures, and the EAC made methodological modifications in response to the heterogeneity of the trial data. The EAC analysis found that TURis substantially reduced the relative risks of transurethral resection syndrome (relative risk 0.18 [95 % confidence interval 0.05-0.62]) and blood transfusion (relative risk 0.35 [95 % confidence interval 0.19-0.65]). The company provided a de novo economic model comparing TURis with mTURP. The EAC critiqued the model methodology and made modifications. This found TURis to be cost saving at £70.55 per case for existing Olympus customers and cost incurring at £19.80 per case for non-Olympus customers. When an additional scenario based on the only available data on readmission (due to any cause) from a single trial was modelled, the estimated cost saving per case was £375.02 for existing users of Olympus electrosurgery equipment and £284.66 per case when new Olympus equipment would need to be purchased. Meta-analysis of eight randomised trials showed that TURis is associated with a statistically significantly reduced risk of transurethral resection syndrome and a reduced need for blood transfusion-two factors that may drive cost saving for the National Health Service. The clinical data are equivocal as to whether TURis shortens the hospital stay. Limited data from a single study suggest that TURis may reduce the rate of readmission after surgery. The NICE guidance supports adoption of the TURis technology for performing transurethral resection of the prostate in men with lower urinary tract symptoms due to benign prostatic enlargement.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26818197 PMCID: PMC4871905 DOI: 10.1007/s40258-015-0221-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Appl Health Econ Health Policy ISSN: 1175-5652 Impact factor: 2.561
Randomised studies of transurethral resection in saline (TURis) versus monopolar transurethral resection of prostate (mTURP) included in the analysis by the External Assessment Centre (EAC)
| Study | Country | Sample size | Follow-up | Method of random allocation | Concealed allocation | Blinded assessment of outcome | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Akman [ | Turkey | 286 patients were enrolled; 257 were analysed for long-term outcomes | 12 months | NR | NR | NR | |
| Chen (I) [ | China | 45 patients were enrolled; 40 were analysed | 6 months | NR | NR | NR | The authors confirmed that this study was different from the Chen (II) study |
| Chen (II) [ | China | 100 patients were randomised and analysed | 2 years | Permuted algorithm stratified for age, prostate volume and baseline symptom severity | NR | Investigators were not blinded to allocation, but patients were | The authors confirmed that this study was different from the Chen (I) study |
| Fagerstrom [ | Sweden | 202 men were randomised; 185 were analysed | 18 months | Random number table | NR | NR | The 2 papers report distinctly different outcome measures occurring at different follow-up points |
| Geavlete [ | Romania | 340 patients | 18 months | NR | Sealed envelope | Yes: patients and assessors of outcome | Data used from 2 arms of a 3-arm study |
| Ho [ | Singapore | 100 men were randomised and analysed | 12 months | Computer program | NR | NR | |
| Michielsen [ | Belgium | 550 patients were randomised | 32.1 months (mTURP) and 31.4 months (TURis), based on a subset of 263 TURis patients and 255 mTURP patients | NR | Sealed envelope | No | The data are published in 5 papers representing 3 reports at different stages of accrual and with significant overlap, i.e. 238 patients (January 2005 to June 2006), 518 patients (January 2005 to January 2009) and 550 patients (January 2005 to August 2009) plus 2 subgroup analyses for men with large prostate glands and men on anticoagulants |
| Rose [ | Germany | 128 patients in total: 56 were treated for bladder cancer and 72 were treated for BPE | NR | NR | NR | NR | The EAC found the study to be pivotal to analysis of readmission due to haemorrhage, and obtained a translation into English. All data utilised are for patients with BPE (not those treated for bladder cancer) |
BPE benign prostatic enlargement, NR not reported
Randomised studies of transurethral resection in saline (TURis) versus monopolar transurethral resection of prostate (mTURP) excluded from the analysis by the External Assessment Centre (EAC)
| Study | Country | Sample size | Follow-up | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Abascal-Junquera [ | Spain | 45 men | NR | Spanish-language paper with English-language abstract; the data were not pivotal to any meta-analysis, so the data were excluded from the EAC report |
| Goh/Gulur [ | NR | 210 patients were recruited and randomised; the first 156 were followed up with IPSSs and flow rates | 12 months | Abstracts only; it is not clear for all outcomes whether they were based on the entire sample (210 patients) or only the 156 patients who were followed up for 12 months |
IPSS International Prostate Symptom Score, NR not reported
Summary of meta-analyses of randomised trials conducted by the company and by the External Assessment Centre (EAC)
| Outcome measure | Company’s included studies | Company’s result | EAC’s included studies | EAC’s results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TUR syndrome | Abascal-Junquera [ | RR 0.28 (95 % CI 0.08–1.02) | Akman [ | Fixed-effects model: |
| Blood transfusion | Akman [ | RR 0.36 (95 % CI 0.16–0.80) | Akman [ | Fixed-effects model: |
| Clot retention | Akman [ | RR TURis/mTURP | Akman [ | Fixed-effects model: |
| Hospital stay | Akman [ | Mean difference −0.52 (95 % CI −0.74 to −0.30) days | Akman [ | Fixed-effects model: |
| Time to catheter removal | Akman [ | Mean difference −0.23 (95 % CI −0.38 to −0.08) days | Akman [ | Fixed-effects model: |
| Procedure time | Akman [ | Mean difference −1.68 (95 % CI −4.18 to 0.81) minutes | Akman [ | Fixed-effects model: |
| Readmission due to haemorrhage | NA | NA | Fagerstrom [ | Fixed-effects model: |
| Urethral stricture/bladder neck contracture (aggregated outcome) | NA | NA | Akman [ | Fixed-effects model: |
| Urethral stricture | NA | NA | Chen (II) [ | Fixed-effects model: |
| Bladder neck contracture | NA | NA | Chen (II) [ | Fixed-effects model: |
| Repeat procedure due to incomplete resection | NA | NA | Fagerstrom [ | Fixed-effects model: |
ARR absolute risk reduction (TURis minus mTURP), CI confidence interval, df degrees of freedom, mTURP monopolar transurethral resection of prostate, NA not applicable, NNT number needed to treat, NS nonsignificant, RR relative risk (TURis/mTURP), TUR transurethral resection, TURis transurethral resection in saline
| The efficacy of transurethral resection in saline (TURis) is equivalent to that of monopolar transurethral resection of the prostate (mTURP) in terms of improving lower urinary tract symptoms due to benign prostatic enlargement. |
| TURis is associated with a reduced risk of transurethral resection syndrome and reduced need for blood transfusion in comparison with mTURP. |
| The clinical data are equivocal as to whether TURis shortens the hospital stay in comparison with mTURP. |
| The TURis system is likely to be cost saving for hospitals that already buy mTURP consumables from Olympus at the list price. TURis may incur a cost for non-Olympus customers. |
| Data from one randomised study suggest that TURis may substantially reduce the rate of readmission (due to any cause) following surgery in comparison with mTURP. |
| Clinical experts suggest that most hospitals replacing their capital equipment for transurethral resection of the prostate would opt for a bipolar system rather than a monopolar system. |