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Healthcare costs attributable to the treatment of patients with spinal metastases: a cohort study with up to 8 years follow-up

BACKGROUND: Cancer treatment, and in particular end-of-life treatment, is associated with substantial healthcare costs. The purpose of this study was to analyse healthcare costs attributable to the treatment of patients with spinal metastases. METHODS: The study population (n = 629) was identified f...

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Autores principales: Tipsmark, Line Stjernholm, Bünger, Cody Eric, Wang, Miao, Morgen, Søren Schmidt, Dahl, Benny, Søgaard, Rikke
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4424566/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25939658
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12885-015-1357-z
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author Tipsmark, Line Stjernholm
Bünger, Cody Eric
Wang, Miao
Morgen, Søren Schmidt
Dahl, Benny
Søgaard, Rikke
author_facet Tipsmark, Line Stjernholm
Bünger, Cody Eric
Wang, Miao
Morgen, Søren Schmidt
Dahl, Benny
Søgaard, Rikke
author_sort Tipsmark, Line Stjernholm
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Cancer treatment, and in particular end-of-life treatment, is associated with substantial healthcare costs. The purpose of this study was to analyse healthcare costs attributable to the treatment of patients with spinal metastases. METHODS: The study population (n = 629) was identified from clinical databases in Denmark. Patients undergoing spinal metastasis treatment from January 2005 through June 2012 were included. Clinical data were merged with national register data on healthcare resource use, costs and death date. The analytic period ranged from treatment initiation until death or administrative censoring in October 2013. Analysis of both survival and costs were stratified into four treatment regimens of increasing invasiveness: radiotherapy (T1), decompression (T2), decompression + instrumentation (T3) and decompression + instrumentation + reconstruction (T4). Survival was analysed using Kaplan-Meier curves. Costs were estimated from a healthcare perspective. Lifetime costs were defined as accumulated costs from treatment initiation until death. The Kaplan-Meier Sampling Average method was used to estimate these costs; 95% CIs were estimated using nonparametric bootstrapping. RESULTS: Mean age of the study population was 65.2 years (range: 19-95). During a mean follow-up period of 9.2 months (range: 0.1-94.5 months), post treatment survival ranged from 4.4 months (95% CI 2.5-7.5) in the T1 group to 8.7 months (95% CI 6.7-14.1) in the T4 group. Inpatient hospitalisation accounted for 65% and outpatient services for 31% of the healthcare costs followed by hospice placements 3% and primary care 1%. Lifetime healthcare costs accounted for €36,616 (95% CI 33,835-39,583) per T1 patients, €49,632 (95% CI 42,287-57,767) per T2 patient, €70997 (95% CI 62,244-82,354) per T3 patient and €87,814 (95% CI 76,638-101,528) per T4 patient. Overall, 45% of costs were utilised within the first month. T1 and T4 patients had almost identical distributions of costs: inpatient hospitalisation averaged 59% and 36% for outpatient services. Costs of T2 and T3 were very similarly distributed with an average of 71% for inpatient hospitalisation and 25% for outpatient services. CONCLUSION: The index treatment accounts for almost half of lifetime health care costs from treatment initiation until death. As expected, lifetime healthcare costs are positively association with invasiveness of treatment.
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spelling pubmed-44245662015-05-09 Healthcare costs attributable to the treatment of patients with spinal metastases: a cohort study with up to 8 years follow-up Tipsmark, Line Stjernholm Bünger, Cody Eric Wang, Miao Morgen, Søren Schmidt Dahl, Benny Søgaard, Rikke BMC Cancer Research Article BACKGROUND: Cancer treatment, and in particular end-of-life treatment, is associated with substantial healthcare costs. The purpose of this study was to analyse healthcare costs attributable to the treatment of patients with spinal metastases. METHODS: The study population (n = 629) was identified from clinical databases in Denmark. Patients undergoing spinal metastasis treatment from January 2005 through June 2012 were included. Clinical data were merged with national register data on healthcare resource use, costs and death date. The analytic period ranged from treatment initiation until death or administrative censoring in October 2013. Analysis of both survival and costs were stratified into four treatment regimens of increasing invasiveness: radiotherapy (T1), decompression (T2), decompression + instrumentation (T3) and decompression + instrumentation + reconstruction (T4). Survival was analysed using Kaplan-Meier curves. Costs were estimated from a healthcare perspective. Lifetime costs were defined as accumulated costs from treatment initiation until death. The Kaplan-Meier Sampling Average method was used to estimate these costs; 95% CIs were estimated using nonparametric bootstrapping. RESULTS: Mean age of the study population was 65.2 years (range: 19-95). During a mean follow-up period of 9.2 months (range: 0.1-94.5 months), post treatment survival ranged from 4.4 months (95% CI 2.5-7.5) in the T1 group to 8.7 months (95% CI 6.7-14.1) in the T4 group. Inpatient hospitalisation accounted for 65% and outpatient services for 31% of the healthcare costs followed by hospice placements 3% and primary care 1%. Lifetime healthcare costs accounted for €36,616 (95% CI 33,835-39,583) per T1 patients, €49,632 (95% CI 42,287-57,767) per T2 patient, €70997 (95% CI 62,244-82,354) per T3 patient and €87,814 (95% CI 76,638-101,528) per T4 patient. Overall, 45% of costs were utilised within the first month. T1 and T4 patients had almost identical distributions of costs: inpatient hospitalisation averaged 59% and 36% for outpatient services. Costs of T2 and T3 were very similarly distributed with an average of 71% for inpatient hospitalisation and 25% for outpatient services. CONCLUSION: The index treatment accounts for almost half of lifetime health care costs from treatment initiation until death. As expected, lifetime healthcare costs are positively association with invasiveness of treatment. BioMed Central 2015-05-05 /pmc/articles/PMC4424566/ /pubmed/25939658 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12885-015-1357-z Text en © Tipsmark et al.; licensee BioMed Central. 2015 This article is published under license to BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research Article
Tipsmark, Line Stjernholm
Bünger, Cody Eric
Wang, Miao
Morgen, Søren Schmidt
Dahl, Benny
Søgaard, Rikke
Healthcare costs attributable to the treatment of patients with spinal metastases: a cohort study with up to 8 years follow-up
title Healthcare costs attributable to the treatment of patients with spinal metastases: a cohort study with up to 8 years follow-up
title_full Healthcare costs attributable to the treatment of patients with spinal metastases: a cohort study with up to 8 years follow-up
title_fullStr Healthcare costs attributable to the treatment of patients with spinal metastases: a cohort study with up to 8 years follow-up
title_full_unstemmed Healthcare costs attributable to the treatment of patients with spinal metastases: a cohort study with up to 8 years follow-up
title_short Healthcare costs attributable to the treatment of patients with spinal metastases: a cohort study with up to 8 years follow-up
title_sort healthcare costs attributable to the treatment of patients with spinal metastases: a cohort study with up to 8 years follow-up
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4424566/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25939658
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12885-015-1357-z
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