| Literature DB >> 29623627 |
Mary M Kilonzo1, Steven R Brown2, Hanne Bruhn3, Jonathan A Cook4, Jemma Hudson5, John Norrie6, Angus J M Watson7, Jessica Wood5.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Our objective was to compare the cost effectiveness of stapled haemorrhoidopexy (SH) and traditional haemorrhoidectomy (TH) in the treatment of grade II-IV haemorrhoidal disease from the perspective of the UK national health service.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29623627 PMCID: PMC6103925 DOI: 10.1007/s41669-017-0052-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacoecon Open ISSN: 2509-4262
Unit costs for resources used in the within-trial economic analysis
| Resource item | Unit cost (£) | Comments and source |
|---|---|---|
| Stapler | ||
| Ethicon PPH03 | 442.01 | Box of 3, £1105 ex VAT (personal communication) |
| Chex CPH 32 | 276.00 | Box of 3, £690 ex VAT (personal communication) |
| Covidien EEA DST | 269.62 | Box of 3, £674 ex VAT (personal communication) |
| Surgeon and anaesthetist | ||
| Consultant | 2.30 | Cost per minute at £138/h [ |
| Specialty doctors (SAS) | 2.13 | Cost per minute at £128/h [ |
| Surgical trainee | 1.20 | Cost per minute at £72/h [ |
| Fellow | 0.85 | Cost per minute at £51/h [ |
| Nurses | ||
| Band 5 | 0.72 | Cost per minute at £43/h [ |
| Band 6 | 0.85 | Cost per minute at £51/h [ |
| Anaesthetic drug cost | ||
| General | 14.31 | Various drugs (propofol) [ |
| General and block | 15.17 | Various drugs (bupivacaine hydrochloride) [ |
| Spinal | 2.25 | Various drugs (lidocaine) [ |
| Interventions 6 weeks | ||
| Outpatient appointment | 122.50 | Average colorectal specialty [ |
| Readmissions after interventiona | 201.00 | Admitted VB07Z emergency medicine, category 2 [ |
| Emergency outpatient visitsb | 162.00 | Emergency medicine, category 2 investigation with category 2 treatment [ |
| Further interventions at 6 weeks, e.g. haemorrhoidectomy | 1106.00 | Day case FZ22E intermediate anal procedures, ≥19 years, with CC score 0 [ |
| Proctoscopy | 10.99 | |
| Medicines, e.g. movical | Various | Based on patient report [ |
| GTN paste | 39.30 | Price per 30 g tube [ |
| Diltiazem cream | 78.83 | Price for 2% diltiazem cream per 30 g tube [ |
| Repeat SH and TH further interventions | ||
| Day case | 751.00 | FZ23A minor anal procedures, ≥19 years [ |
| Day case | 1118.00 | Day case FZ22D intermediate anal procedures, ≥19 years, with CC score 1–2 [ |
| Post-discharge events | ||
| Doctor visits | 44.00 | Per 11.7-min consultation, including qualification costs [ |
| Nurse visits | 11.00 | Per 15.5-min consultation, including qualification costs [ |
| Medications | ||
| Analgesic | Various | As reported by participants [ |
| Laxative | Various | As reported by participants [ |
| Antibiotics | Various | As reported by participants [ |
| Rubber ligation | 181.00 | FZ23A minor anal procedures, ≥19 years, procedures in outpatients [ |
CC complications, GTN glyceryl trinitrate, SAS specialty and associate specialistSH stapled haemorrhoidopexy, TH traditional haemorrhoidectomy, VAT value added tax
aVisits for post-operative complications, such as bleeding, that required hospitalisation
bEmergency visits for post-operative complications, such as pain, that did not result in admission
Mean UK national health service costs (£) and adjusted mean difference for study interventions
| Resource | SH | TH | Mean difference (95% CI)a |
|---|---|---|---|
| Intervention | |||
| Time of staff at operation | 208 ± 82 (349) | 213 ± 88 (360) | −5 (−18 to 9) |
| Anaesthetic used | 14 ± 3 (356) | 14 ± 2 (361) | −0.19 (−0.53 to 0.15) |
| Stapler | 307 ± 154 (346) | 32 ± 111 (362) | 275 (207 to 342) |
| Admissions during intervention | 51 ± 134 (354) | 49 ± 145 (362) | 3 (−22 to 27) |
| Total intervention cost | 581 ± 230 (341) | 308 ± 215 (360) | 273 (240 to 306) |
| 6-week visit | 151 ± 314 (305) | 175 ± 390 (304) | −25 (−68 to 17) |
| Total 12 months | 869 ± 579 (197) | 547 ± 447 (188) | 309 (237 to 380) |
| Total 12–24 monthsb | 102 ± 366 (244) | 56 ± 219 (233) | 48 (13 to 82) |
| Total over 24 months | 922 ± 587 (158) | 621 ± 583 (156) | 323 (237 to 410) |
Data are presented as mean ± standard deviation (N)
CI confidence interval, EQ-5D-3L EuroQoL—five dimensions—three levels instrument, N number of patients included in the analysis, SD standard deviation, SH stapled haemorrhoidopexy, TH traditional haemorrhoidectomy
aCost difference adjusted for minimisation covariates and baseline EQ-5D-3L
b24-month costs discounted at 3.5%. Positive cost difference values indicate that SH costs more than TH and vice versa
Quality of life (EQ-5D and quality-adjusted life-year) by study intervention
| Time | SH | TH | Mean difference (SH–TH)a |
|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline | 0.762 ± 0.247 (388) | 0.764 ± 0.264 (386) | |
| 1 week | 0.592 ± 0.315 (298) | 0.458 ± 0.337 (291) | 0.135 (0.082 to 0.188) |
| 3 weeks | 0.802 ± 0.244 (285) | 0.750 ± 0.244 (276) | 0.050 (0.008 to 0.091) |
| 6 weeks | 0.846 ± 0.220 (305) | 0.851 ± 0.235 (303) | −0.004 (−0.037 to 0.029) |
| 12 months | 0.822 ± 0.252 (291) | 0.880 ± 0.209 (274) | −0.064 (−0.095 to −0.033) |
| 24 monthsb | 0.802 ± 0.242 (283) | 0.841 ± 0.192 (272) | −0.046 (−0.079 to −0.013) |
| QALYc | 1.676 ± 0.384 (206) | 1.738 ± 0.334 (194) | −0.071 (−0.127 to −0.016) |
Data are presented as mean ± standard deviation (N) or mean difference (95% confidence interval)
EQ-5D EuroQoL—five dimensions instrument, N number of patients included in the analysis, QALY quality-adjusted life-year, SH stapled haemorrhoidopexy, TH traditional haemorrhoidectomy
aA positive sign means SH has a higher score than TH; a negative value means SH has a lower score
b24-month EQ-5D-3L score discounted at 3.5% per annum
cQALYs gained are based on an area under a curve, and the EQ-SD-3L scores are point estimates at specific times
Estimation of cost-utility analysis
| Arm | Costs | Difference | QALY | Difference | ICERa |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline imputed data | |||||
| SH ( | 941 ± 415 | 1.62 ± 0.43 | Dominated | ||
| TH ( | 602 ± 507 | 337 [41] (251–423) | 1.69 ± 0.38 | −0.070 [0.027] (0.127 to −0.011) | |
| Number of recurrences | |||||
| SH ( | 941 ± 415 | 0.327 ± 0.008 | Dominated | ||
| TH ( | 602 ± 507 | 337 [41] (251–423) | 0.142 ± 0.006 | 0.18 [0.030] (0.245–0.120) | |
| Complete case data | |||||
| SH ( | 864 ± 415 | 1.72 ± 0.33 | Dominated | ||
| TH ( | 573 ± 507 | 288 [473] (190–386) | 1.77 ± 0.30 | −0.060 [0.026] | |
| Using SF-6D data | |||||
| SH ( | 873 ± 510 | 1.54 ± 0.23 | Dominated | ||
| TH ( | 549 ± 493 | 313 (204–423) | 1.61 ± 0.20 | −0.063 (−0.107 to −0.018) | |
Costs are presented in £. Data are presented as mean ± standard deviation or difference [standard error] (95% confidence interval)
CI confidence interval, ICER incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, N number of patients included in the analysis, QALY quality-adjusted life-year, SE standard error, SF-6D MOS 36-item Short-Form Health Survey, SH stapled haemorrhoidopexy, TH traditional haemorrhoidectomy
aSH dominated means that SH costs more and has fewer QALYs than TH
bThe lowest price of staplers used in the study
Fig. 1Cost effectiveness acceptability curve showing the probability that SH and TH is cost effective giving the different values of willingness to pay thresholds
Fig. 2Cost effectiveness scatter plot illustrating the distribution of differences in cost and QALY
| Previous economic studies of traditional excisional surgery and stapled haemorrhoidopexy were based on limited quality-of-life data and suggested a shorter operation time for stapled haemorrhoidopexy than for traditional excisional surgery. |
| The results of this study show that traditional excisional surgery costs less and is associated with higher quality of life than stapled haemorrhoidopexy. |
| Given the current financial status of the UK national health service, commissioners of healthcare may consider being more prescriptive about procedures being offered for the surgical treatment of haemorrhoids. |