| Literature DB >> 30066101 |
Alessandro Castagna1, Raffaele Garofalo2, Eran Maman3, Alisha C Gray4, Elizabeth A Brooks4.
Abstract
PURPOSE: There is ongoing debate regarding the optimal surgical treatment of irreparable rotator cuff tears (IRCT). This study aimed to assess within the Italian health care system the cost-effectiveness of subacromial spacer as a treatment modality for patients with IRCT.Entities:
Keywords: Biodegradable balloon; Cost-effectiveness; Irreparable tears; Rotator cuff tear; Rotator cuff tear treatment modalities; Subacromial spacer
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30066101 PMCID: PMC6399196 DOI: 10.1007/s00264-018-4065-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Orthop ISSN: 0341-2695 Impact factor: 3.075
Fig. 1Schematic presentation of the InSpace™ system implantation steps: a Step 1: selection of the correct spacer size by measuring the distance from the lateral border of the greater tuberosity to approximately 1–2 cm medial to the glenoid apex, using a surgical probe. The system is available in three optional sizes (small, medium, or large) to accommodate individual patient’s anatomic variations. b Step 2: insertion of the InSpace™ introducer into the subacromial space (the spacer is folded inside). c Step 3: inflation of the balloon-shaped spacer with saline as per spacer size and device’s instruction for use. d Step 4: final position of the sealed spacer in the subacromial space between the humeral head and acromion
Fig. 2Model structure—treatment alternatives for irreparable rotator cuff tear
Model parameters with base case and sensitivity analysis range
| Description | Base case | Range from lit review | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Costs (€) | ||||
| Variable | ||||
| C1 | Cost InSpace™ | 15,000 | 12,000–18,000 | Assumption based on Makhni and Kang 2016 |
| C2 | Cost of total reverse shoulder arthroplasty | 28,210 | 17,619–55,359 | Renfree 2013, Virani 2013, Makhni 2016, Kang 2016 |
| C3 | Cost of partial arthroscopic repair | 11,739 | 8306–17,413 | Makhni 2016, Vitale 2007, Genuario 2012, Mather 2013, Bisson, 2015, Kang 2016 |
| C4 | Cost non-operative care | 9068 | 7254–10,882 | Makhni 2016 |
| Utilities | ||||
| U1 | Successful InSpace™ | 0.700 | 0.560–0.840 | Assumptions |
| U2 | Complication InSpace™ | 0.660 | 0.520–0.792 | Assumptions |
| U3 | Successful rTSA | 0.660 | 0.600–0.900 | Makhni 2016, Kang 2016 |
| U4 | Complication rTSA | 0.411 | 0.411–0.700 | Makhni 2016, Kang 2016 |
| U5 | Healed partial repair | 0.662 | 0.510–0.770 | Makhni 2016, Kang 2016 |
| U6 | Re-torn partial repair | 0.656 | 0.470–0.710 | Makhni 2016, Kang 2016 |
| U7 | No progression of symptoms non-operative care | 0.662 | 0.56–0.84 | Makhni 2016, Kang 2016 |
| U8 | Symptoms worsen (retear) Non-operative care | 0.660 | 0.56–0.84 | Makhni 2016, Kang 2016 |
| P1 | Probability of revision (InSpace™) | 0.125 | 0.40–0.125 | Gervasi 2016, Study PowerPoint |
| P2 | Probability of successful revision (InSpace™) | 0.50 | 0.40–0.60 | Assumption, Makhni 2016 |
| P3 | Probability of revision (rTSA) | 0.10 | 0.10–0.69 | Anley 2014, Russo 2015, Kang 2016, |
| P4 | Probability of successful revision (rTSA) | 0.50 | 0.10–0.84 | Anley 2014, Russo, Makhni 2016 2015, Kang 2016, Holschen 2017 |
| P5 | Probability of structure failure with arthroscopic partial repair | 0.52 | 0.10–0.52 | Berth 2010, Kang 2015 |
| P6 | Probability of InSpace™ if arthroscopic partial repair structure fails | 0.50 | 0.40–0.60 | Assumption |
| P7 | Probability of success with Non-operative care | 0.68 | 0.68–0.82 | Mather 2013, Kang 2016 |
| P8 | Probability of InSpace™ if symptoms persist with Non-operative care | 0.50 | 0.40–0.60 | Assumption, Makhni 2016 |
Base case cost-effectiveness analysis
| Management strategy | Total expected per patient cost (€) | Total expected per patient QALYs | Incremental cost (€) | Incremental effectiveness QALYs | Incremental C/E (ICER) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non-operative care | 16,805 | 1.33 | |||
| InSpace™ | 17,327 | 1.38 | 522 | 0.050 | 10,440 |
| Arthroscopic partial rotator cuff repair | 24,312 | 1.32 | 6985 | − 0.060 | − 116,417 |
| Reverse shoulder arthroplasty | 31,031 | 1.28 | 6719 | − 0.040 | − 167,975 |
Arthroscopic partial repair and rTSA are both dominated since both are more costly and less effective than InSpace™ and non-operative care. Arthroscopic partial repair is more effective but slightly more costly than non-operative care. When a WTP of $50,000 (45,483 €) is used, InSpace™ is the preferred strategy. rTSA reverse total shoulder arthroplasty, WTP willingness to pay
Fig. 3Graph of base case cost-effectiveness analysis. The four competing treatment strategies with model parameters set at the base case scenario (QALYs, quality-adjusted life years)
One-way sensitivity analysis results
| Alternative treatment options vs. InSpace™ | Total expected per patient costs (€) for InSpace™ | Total expected per patient QALYs for InSpace™ | InSpace™ comparison |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cost of InSpace™, 12,000 | 14,327 | 1.38 | InSpace™ costs lower, InSpace™ QALY higher InSpace™ dominates all strategies |
| Cost of InSpace™, 18,000 | 20,327 | 1.38 | Non-op costs lower, InSpace™ QALY higher |
| Probability of InSpace™ success, 0.875 | 16,997 | 1.32 | Non-op costs lower, InSpace™ QALY higher |
| Probability of InSpace™ success, 0.96 | 16,128 | 1.39 | InSpace™ costs lower, InSpace™ QALY higher InSpace™ dominates all strategies |
| Probability of non-operative success, 0.54 | 17,327 | 1.38 | InSpace™ costs lower, InSpace™ QALY higher InSpace™ dominates all strategies |
| Probability of non-operative success, 0.82 | 17,327 | 1.38 | Non-op costs lower, InSpace™ QALY higher |
| Utility of InSpace™ success, 0.56 | 17,327 | 1.13 | Non-op costs lower, non-op QALY higher InSpace™ dominated by non-op |
| Utility of InSpace™ success, 0.84 | 17,327 | 1.64 | Non-op costs lower, InSpace™ QALY higher |
| Cost of rTSA, 17,619 | 17,327 | 1.38 | Non-op costs lower, InSpace™ QALY higher |
| Cost of rTSA, 55,359 | 17,327 | 1.38 | Non-op costs lower, InSpace™ QALY higher |
| Cost of arthroscopic partial repair, 8306 | 17,327 | 1.38 | Non-op costs lower, InSpace™ QALY higher |
| Cost of arthroscopic partial repair, 17413 | 17,327 | 1.38 | Non-op costs lower, InSpace™ QALY higher |
| Cost of non-operative care, 7254 | 17,327 | 1.38 | Non-op costs lower, InSpace™ QALY higher |
| Cost of non-operative care, 10882 | 17,327 | 1.38 | InSpace™ costs lower, InSpace™ QALY higher, InSpace™ dominates all strategies |
Non-op non-operative, rTSA reverse total shoulder arthroplasty, QALY quality-adjusted life year
Fig. 4Two-way sensitivity analysis plot for utility after successful InSpace™ versus utility after successful rTSA. The colors represent the preferred strategy for the combination of the two parameters based on NMB when a WTP of $50,000 (45,483 €) is used. The InSpace™ strategy is the preferred strategy for most feasible combinations of InSpace™ utility and rTSA utility in a comparison of the three surgical treatments