| Literature DB >> 32012977 |
Nemanja Rancic1,2,3, Katarina Mladenovic1,4, Nela V Ilic5,6, Viktorija Dragojevic-Simic1,2, Menelaos Karanikolas7, Tihomir V Ilic1,8, Dusica M Stamenkovic1,4.
Abstract
This prospective randomized study aims to evaluate the feasibility and cost-effectiveness of combining transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) with patient controlled intravenous morphine analgesia (PCA-IV) as part of multimodal analgesia after thoracotomy. Patients assigned to the active treatment group (a-tDCS, n = 27) received tDCS over the left primary motor cortex for five days, whereas patients assigned to the control group (sham-tDCS, n = 28) received sham tDCS stimulations. All patients received postoperative PCA-IV morphine. For cost-effectiveness analysis we used data about total amount of PCA-IV morphine and maximum visual analog pain scale with cough (VASP-Cmax). Direct costs of hospitalization were assumed as equal for both groups. Cost-effectiveness analysis was performed with the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER), expressed as the incremental cost (RSD or US$) per incremental gain in mm of VASP-Cmax reduction. Calculated ICER was 510.87 RSD per VASP-Cmax 1 mm reduction. Conversion on USA market (USA data 1.325 US$ for 1 mg of morphine) revealed ICER of 189.08 US$ or 18960.39 RSD/1 VASP-Cmax 1 mm reduction. Cost-effectiveness expressed through ICER showed significant reduction of PCA-IV morphine costs in the tDCS group. Further investigation of tDCS benefits with regards to reduction of postoperative pain treatment costs should also include the long-term benefits of reduced morphine use.Entities:
Keywords: acute pain; cost and cost analysis; morphine; pain, postoperative; pharmacoeconomics; transcranial direct current stimulation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32012977 PMCID: PMC7037666 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17030816
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Utility and expenditure of morphine cost in patients where active or sham transcranial direct current stimulation was used for post-thoracotomy pain treatment.
| 1 mg morphine = 3.58 RSD | Type of Stimulation | |
|---|---|---|
| Active Group | Sham Group | |
| Cumulative morphine | 2662.2 mg | 3518.4 mg |
| VASP-Cmax on postoperative day 1 *(A) | 40.00 mm | 49.50 mm |
| VASP-Cmax on postoperative day 5 (B) | 29.00 mm | 44.50 mm |
| Reduction VASP-Cmax score (A minus B) | 11 mm | 5 mm |
| Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) | 510.87 RSD/1 VASP-Cmax mm reduction | |
| Morphine cost per patient | 352.99 RSD | 449.85 RSD |
VASP-Cmax-maximum visual analogue pain score with cough, RSD-Republic of Serbia Dinar; US$-United States Dollar; tDCS-transcranial direct current stimulation; A- VASP-Cmax on postoperative day 1; B- VASP-Cmax on postoperative day 5.
Utility and expenditure of morphine cost data conversion from Serbian market to United States of America (USA) market, in the study population of patients where active or sham transcranial direct current stimulation was used for post-thoracotomy pain treatment.
| 1 mg morphine = 1.325 US$ | Type of Stimulation | |
|---|---|---|
| Active Group | Sham Group | |
| Cumulative morphine | 2662.2 mg | 3518.4 mg |
| VASP-Cmax on postoperative day 1 (A) | 40.00 mm | 49.50 mm |
| VASP-Cmax on postoperative day 5 (B) | 29.00 mm | 44.50 mm |
| Reduction VASP-Cmax (A minus B) | 11 mm | 5 mm |
| Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) | 18,960.39 RSD/1 VASP-Cmax mm reduction | |
| Morphine cost per patient | 13,100.87 RSD | 16,695.92 RSD |
VASP-Cmax-maximum visual analogue pain score with cough, RSD-Republic of Serbia Dinar; US$-United States Dollar; tDCS-transcranial direct current stimulation; A- VASP-Cmax on postoperative day 1; B- VASP-Cmax on postoperative day 5.
Published data on the use and cost of transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) for treatment of chronic medical conditions. Data are available only on tDCS for chronic pain (Zaghi et al., 2009) [8] and depression (Sauvaget et al., 2019) [9].
| Medical Condition | Price of tDCS per Session | Number of Patients | Year of Publication | Costs |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chronic pain [ | 167.72 (US$) | 22 | 2009 | Room utilization |
| Depression [ | 103.71 (EU€) | N/A | 2019 | Equipment |
US$-United States Dollar, EU€-European Union euro, USA-United States of America
The ”impact inventory” table for transcranial direct current (tDCS) stimulation cost-effectiveness analysis for acute postoperative pain management. The concept of “impact inventory” was suggested by Neumann et al. [11], and the necessary information was retrieved from Zaghi et al. [8] and (Sauvaget et al., 2019) [9].
| Specific Parameter | Component |
|---|---|
| Room utilization | Country and hospital dependent costs |
| Administrative fees | Country and hospital dependent costs |
| Hospitalization costs | Country and hospital dependent costs |
| Equipment costs | Device price |
| Staff costs | Country and hospital dependent |
| Basic analgesia technique cost | PCA/PCEA pumps |
| Clinical benefit | Opioid reduction |
PCA-patient controlled analgesia, PCEA-patient controlled epidural analgesia.