| Literature DB >> 30518430 |
Duncan Mortimer1, Marije Bosch2,3,4, Joanne E Mckenzie5, Simon Turner5, Marisa Chau2,3, Jennie L Ponsford6,7, Jonathan C Knott8,9, Russell L Gruen3,10, Sally E Green5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Evidence-based guidelines for the management of mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) in the emergency department (ED) are now widely available, and yet, clinical practice remains inconsistent with the guidelines. The Neurotrauma Evidence Translation (NET) intervention was developed to increase the uptake of guideline recommendations and improve the management of minor head injury in Australian emergency departments (EDs). However, the adoption of this type of intervention typically entails an upfront investment that may or may not be fully offset by improvements in clinical practice, health outcomes and/or reductions in health service utilisation. The present study estimates the cost and cost-effectiveness of the NET intervention, as compared to the passive dissemination of the guideline, to evaluate whether any improvements in clinical practice or health outcomes due to the NET intervention can be obtained at an acceptable cost. METHODS ANDEntities:
Keywords: Clinical practice guideline; Cost-effectiveness; Emergency medicine; Evidence-based practice; Implementation science; Mild head injury; Mild traumatic brain injury
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30518430 PMCID: PMC6280545 DOI: 10.1186/s13012-018-0834-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
Schedule of measures for the economic evaluation
| Measures | Data collection | Timing | Source | Level |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clinical practice outcomes | ||||
| Appropriate PTA screening (PTA)1 | Chart audit | Retrospectively for 2 months period post-intervention | ED medical records of eligible patients | Patient |
| Provision of written patient information (INFO) | ||||
| Safe discharge (SAFED)2 | ||||
| Clinical patient outcomes and health-related quality of life | ||||
| Anxiety3 | Telephone interview | Ave. 210 days post discharge (SD 38.5 days; IQR 181–239; min = 130, max = 321) | Patient self-report | Patient |
| Post-concussive symptoms4 | ||||
| HRQoL5 | ||||
| Direct cost of the intervention | ||||
| Preparation/delivery time and attendance for local training sessions | Questionnaire | On completion of delivery to all EDs | Clinician self-report | ED |
| Direct cost of all other intervention components | Data abstraction and interview | On completion of delivery to all EDs | Administrative and financial records | ED |
| Health care utilisation and costs | ||||
| Medical and surgical services received in the ED/inpatient ward (including CT scan) | Chart audit | Retrospectively on 2 months period post-intervention | ED medical records of eligible patients | Patient |
| Re-presentation to ED within 1 month of mTBI | ||||
| Post-discharge mTBI-related service utilisation | Telephone interview | Ave. 210 days post discharge (SD 38.5 days; IQR 181–239; min = 130, max = 321) | Patient self-report | Patient |
1Primary outcome for the economic evaluation
2Defined as PTA, INFO, and CT where CT denotes whether a CT scan was provided in the presence of a risk factor that justifies the scan (age 65 or older; GCS < 15; amnesia; suspected skull fracture; vomiting and coagulopathy) [26] (assessed in the cohort of patients for whom risk criteria were recorded only). CT therefore indicates whether a scan was appropriately provided but not whether a scan was ‘appropriately denied’. CT and SAFED only assessed in the cohort of patients for whom risk criteria were recorded
3Anxiety measured using the relevant questions in the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale giving a score between 0 and 21, higher scores indicate higher levels of anxiety, and a score > 7 indicative of clinically significant anxiety
4Post-concussion symptoms measured using the 13-item Rivermead scale giving a score between 0 and 52, higher scores indicate greater severity of post-concussion symptoms
512-item short form health survey (SF-12 v2) to derive SF-12-based SF6D index scores using the UK weights from Brazier and Roberts [20]. SF12-based SF6D index scores range between 0.350 (the ‘pits’) and 1.000 (full health)
Effect of the intervention on clinical practice and patient outcomes
| Variable | No. of patients (EDs) | Increment, raw (95%CI)^ | Increment, adjusted (95%CI) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rx | Control | Rx | Control | |||
| Clinical practice outcomes (NET sample) | ||||||
| PTA1 | 893 (14) | 1050 (17) | 117 (13.1%) | 12 (1.1%) | 11.96% (9.8, 14.1) | 13.63% (8.3, 19.0)† |
| INFO | 785 (14) | 944 (17) | 160 (20.4%) | 175 (18.5%) | 1.84% (− 1.9, 5.6) | 3.15% (− 3.0, 9.3)† |
| SAFED2 | 402 (14) | 413 (17) | 14 (3.5%) | 0 (0%) | 3.49% (1.0, 6.0) | – |
| Clinical outcomes and quality of life (NET-Plus sample) | ||||||
| Anxiety3 | 125 (10) | 218 (14) | 3.43 (0.32) | 4.27 (0.27) | − 0.83 (− 1.69, 0.02) | − 0.52 (− 1.34, 0.30)†† |
| Rivermead4 | 125 (10) | 218 (14) | 4.73 (0.49) | 6.68 (0.59) | − 1.96 (3.65, 0.26) | − 1.15 (− 2.77, 0.48)†† |
| HRQoL5 | 123 (10) | 208 (14) | 0.805 (0.01) | 0.776 (0.01) | 0.029 (− 0.00, 0.06) | 0.030 (− 0.00, 0.06)‡ |
^Increment, raw = unconditional difference in absolute risk or average scores due to exposure to the intervention from two sample t test with equal variances
†Increment, adjusted = difference in absolute risk due to exposure to the intervention; adjusted for the following minimisation factors and pre-specified confounders: age, sex, out_of_hours, rurality, mTBI protocol, ED participation in NET-Plus, and annual_presentation_rate. Estimates derived from margins, dydx(i.study_group) after xtgee, family(binomial) link(logit) corr(exchangeable) vce(robust) to account for within-cluster correlation structure and yielding cluster-robust standard errors even if the correlation structure is misspecified
††Increment, adjusted = difference in average scores due to exposure to the intervention; adjusted for the following minimisation factors and pre-specified confounders: age, sex, out_of_hours, rurality, mTBI protocol, and annual_presentation_rate. Estimates derived from margins, dydx(i.study_group) after xtgee, family(Gaussian) link(identity) corr(independent) vce(robust) to account for within-cluster correlation structure and yielding cluster-robust standard errors even if the correlation structure is misspecified
‡Increment, adjusted = difference in average scores due to exposure to the intervention; adjusted for the following minimisation factors and pre-specified confounders: age, sex, out_of_hours, rurality, mTBI protocol, and annual_presentation_rate. Estimates derived from margins, dydx(i.study_group) after xtgee, family(Gaussian) link(log) corr(independent) vce(robust) to account for within-cluster correlation structure and yielding cluster-robust standard errors even if the correlation structure is misspecified
1Primary outcome for the economic evaluation
2Defined as PTA, INFO, and CT where CT denotes whether a CT scan was provided in the presence of a risk factor that justifies the scan (age 65 or older; GCS < 15; amnesia; suspected skull fracture; vomiting and coagulopathy) [26] (assessed in the cohort of patients for whom risk criteria were recorded only). CT therefore indicates whether a scan was appropriately provided but not whether a scan was ‘appropriately denied’. CT and SAFED only assessed in the cohort of patients for whom risk criteria were recorded
3Anxiety measured using the relevant questions in the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale giving a score between 0 and 21, higher scores indicate higher levels of anxiety
4Post-concussion symptoms measured using the 13-item Rivermead scale giving a score between 0 and 52, higher scores indicate greater severity of post-concussion symptoms
5SF-12v2-based SF6D index scores calculated using weights from Brazier and Roberts [20]. SF-12v2-based SF6D index scores range between 0.350 (the ‘pits’) and 1.000 (full health)
Effect of the intervention on Rx cost, HSU cost, and total cost (per patient)
| Variable | No. of patients (EDs) | Mean (SE) | Incremental cost, raw (95%CI)† | Incremental cost, adjusted (95%CI)‡ | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rx | Control | Rx | Control | |||
| NET | ||||||
| Rx Cost | ||||||
| Base-case | 893 (14) | 1050 (17) | $139.0 (1.6) | $0.8 (0.0) | $138.20 (135,141) | – |
| No URG | 893 (14) | 1050 (17) | $139.0 (1.6) | $0.8 (0.0) | $138.20 (135,141) | – |
| HSU Cost | ||||||
| Base-case | 893 (14) | 1050 (17) | $825.9 (44) | $777.4 (33) | $48.52 (− 57, 154) | $23.86 (− 106,153) |
| No URG | 893 (14) | 1050 (17) | $354.0 (42) | $315.7 (31) | $38.35 (− 62, 139) | -$1.08 (− 125,122) |
| Total Cost | ||||||
| Base-case | 893 (14) | 1050 (17) | $964.9 (44) | $778.2 (33) | $186.72 (81, 292) | $169.89 (43, 297) |
| No URG | 893 (14) | 1050 (17) | $493.0 (42) | $316.5 (31) | $176.55 (76, 277) | $159.96 (39, 281) |
| NET-Plus, including post-NET HSU | ||||||
| Rx Cost | ||||||
| Base-case | 126 (10) | 218 (14) | $143.8 (4.6) | $0.8 (0.0) | $142.96 (136,150) | – |
| No URG | 126 (10) | 218 (14) | $143.8 (4.6) | $0.8 (0.0) | $142.96 (136,150) | – |
| HSU Cost | ||||||
| Base-case | 126 (10) | 218 (14) | $980.8 (235) | $738.5 (72) | $242.38 (− 156,640) | $341.78 (− 58, 742) |
| No URG | 126 (10) | 218 (14) | $526.6 (233) | $276.5 (66) | $250.06 (− 137,638) | $338.54 (− 56, 733) |
| Total Cost | ||||||
| Base-case | 126 (10) | 218 (14) | $1124.6 (235) | $739.3 (72) | $385.34 (− 12, 783) | $505.06 (96, 915) |
| No URG | 126 (10) | 218 (14) | $670.3 (233) | $277.3 (66) | $393.02 (− 6, 780) | $543.49 (116, 971) |
†Incremental cost, raw = unconditional difference in cost per patient due to exposure to the intervention from two sample t test with equal variances
‡Incremental cost, adjusted = difference in cost due to exposure to the intervention; adjusted for the following minimisation factors and pre-specified confounders: age, sex, out_of_hours, rurality, mTBI protocol, ED participation in NET-Plus, and annual_presentation_rate. Estimates derived from margins, dydx(i.study_group) after xtgee, family(gamma) link(log) corr(exchangeable) vce(robust) to account for within-cluster correlation structure and yielding cluster-robust standard errors even if the correlation structure is misspecified
ED and patient characteristics
| NET sample | NET-Plus sample | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Control 1 | Intervention 2 | Control 3 | Intervention 4 | |
| ED structural characteristics | ||||
| Hospital type (private) | 1 (6%) | 1 (7%) | 1 (7%) | 1 (10%) |
| Hospital type (public) | 16 (94%) | 13 (93%) | 13 (93%) | 9 (90%) |
| Trauma unit | 3 (18%) | 4 (29%) | 2 (14%) | 3 (30%) |
| Short stay unit | 13 (76%) | 10 (71%) | 10 (71%) | 6 (60%) |
| Annual presentation rate 2012, mean (SD) | 44,710 (22593) | 41,255 (16512) | 44,592 (25046) | 36,852 (16913) |
| Annual presentation rate 2012, median (IQR) | 42,495 (34,313 to 46,690) | 41,574 (27,075 to 55,667) | 38,816 (32,833 to 52,963) | 32,612 (25,646 to 47,189) |
| Existence of protocol for mTBI | 4 (24%) | 3 (21%) | 3 (21%) | 3 (30%) |
| NET-Plus | 14 (82%) | 13 (93%) | 14 (100%) | 10 (100%) |
| Rurality (regional) | 7 (41%) | 5 (36%) | 6 (43%) | 4 (40%) |
| Patient characteristics | ||||
| Age | 50.9 (23.65) | 54.2 (24.93) | 53.5 (20.59) | 55.2 (21.17) |
| Sex (% male) | 476 (45%) | 390 (44%) | 105 (48%) | 51 (41%) |
| After hours presentation | 748 (71%) | 653 (73%) | 149 (68%) | 90 (72%) |
| Initial GCS 15 | 961 (92%) | 768 (86%) | 213 (98%) | 115 (92%) |
| Initial GCS 14 | 89 (8%) | 125 (14%) | 5 (2%) | 10 (8%) |
| Mechanism of injury, incidental fall | 492 (47%) | 481 (54%) | 113 (52%) | 65 (52%) |
| Mechanism of injury, road traffic | 58 (6%) | 51 (6%) | 11 (5%) | 10 (8%) |
| Mechanism of injury, violence/assault | 250 (24%) | 163 (18%) | 36 (17%) | 15 (12%) |
| Mechanism of injury, sport | 62 (6%) | 55 (6%) | 17 (8%) | 11 (9%) |
| Mechanism of injury, others | 179 (17%) | 137 (15%) | 41 (19%) | 24 (19%) |
| Mechanism of injury, unclear/not reported | 9 (0.9%) | 6 (0.7%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| Presence other injuries (outside head) | 508 (48%) | 516 (58%) | 105 (48%) | 63 (50%) |
| Alcohol/illicit drug involvement | 237 (23%) | 206 (23%) | 28 (13%) | 15 (12%) |
| Pre-existing coagulopathy or anti-coagulant or anti-platelet drugs | 175 (17%) | 165 (18%) | 37 (17%) | 17 (14%) |
| Known previous neurological condition | 202 (19%) | 191 (21%) | 26 (12%) | 13 (10%) |
| Known neurosurgery | 14 (1.3%) | 18 (2.0%) | 2 (0.9%) | 3 (2.4%) |
| Scalp laceration | 532 (51%) | 464 (52%) | 130 (60%) | 67 (54%) |
| Scalp haematoma | 400 (38%) | 372 (42%) | 79 (36%) | 42 (34%) |
| Clinical suspicion of skull fracture | 51 (4.9%) | 57 (6%) | 8 (3.7%) | 8 (6%) |
| Loss of consciousness | 186 (18%) | 155 (17%) | 50 (23%) | 18 (14%) |
| Vomiting | 56 (5%) | 49 (5%) | 12 (6%) | 4 (3.2%) |
| Headache | 259 (25%) | 231 (26%) | 44 (20%) | 37 (30%) |
| Post traumatic seizure | 3 (0.3%) | 6 (0.7%) | 0 (0.0%) | 2 (1.6%) |
| Focal neurological deficit | 21 (2.0%) | 13 (1.5%) | 5 (2.3%) | 3 (2.4%) |
1Number of patients = 1050; numbers of clusters = 17
2Number of patients = 893; number of clusters = 14
3Number of patients = 218; number of clusters = 14
4Number of patients = 125; number of clusters = 10
Incremental cost-effectiveness for clinical practice and patient outcomes
| Variable | ΔC | ΔE | ΔC / ΔE | Parametric (95%CI)† | Non-parametric (95%CI)‡ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clinical practice outcomes (NET sample) | |||||
| PTA1 | $169.89 (43, 297) | 0.1363 (0.083, 0.190) | $1246 | ($525, $2055) | ($595, $2066) |
| INFO2 | $169.89 (43, 297) | 0.0315 (− 0.030, 0.093) | $5393 | ($1672,− $18,125) | ($1909, − $22,865) |
| SAFED3 | $169.89 (43, 297) | 0.0349 (0.010, 0.060) | $4868 | ($1882, $11928) | ($2093, $11574) |
| Clinical outcomes and quality of life (NET-Plus sample) | |||||
| HADS Anxiety4 | $505.06 (96, 915) | − 0.52 (− 1.34, 0.30) | $971^ | ($132, − $1086) | ($215, − $1084) |
| Rivermead PCS5 | $505.06 (96, 915) | − 1.15 (− 2.77, 0.48) | $441^ | ($54, − $1270) | ($90, − $1346) |
| SF6D HRQoL6 | $505.06 (96, 915) | 0.030 (− 0.00, 0.06) | $16,948 | ($2015,-$367,759) | ($3796,-$314,637) |
†Parametric CIs derived via Fieller’s Theorem using iprogs.do [25] based on treatment effects reported in Tables 3 and 4 and using standard errors and correlations calculated from non-parametric bootstrap re-estimation
‡Non-parametric CIs derived via acceptability method using bsceaprogs.do [25] based on the data generated from bootstrap re-estimation of our estimates of incremental cost and incremental effectiveness using bmultiv.do [25]
1Cost per patient appropriately screened for PTA (primary outcome)
2Cost per patient who received written patient information upon discharge (INFO)
3Cost per safe discharge (SAFED) where SAFED defined as CT scan appropriately provided plus PTA plus INFO
4Cost per point improvement on anxiety questions of Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS), higher scores indicate higher levels of anxiety
5Cost per point improvement on the Rivermead post-concussive symptoms scale, higher scores indicate greater severity
6Cost per point improvement in SF6D index scores, higher scores indicate higher HRQoL
^Calculated as ΔC/− ΔE to reflect the fact that higher scores indicate greater severity for HADS and Rivermead
Fig. 1Cost-effectiveness acceptability curve for the primary outcome (PTA)
Fig. 2Cost-effectiveness plane and cost per additional patient appropriately screened for PTA (primary outcome)
Fig. 3Cost-effectiveness plane and cost per point improvement on HADS