Cargando…

Health Care Resource Utilization in Management of Opioid-Naive Patients With Newly Diagnosed Neck Pain

IMPORTANCE: Research has uncovered heterogeneity and inefficiencies in the management of idiopathic low back pain, but few studies have examined longitudinal care patterns following newly diagnosed neck pain. OBJECTIVE: To understand health care utilization in patients with new-onset idiopathic neck...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Jin, Michael C., Jensen, Michael, Zhou, Zeyi, Rodrigues, Adrian, Ren, Alexander, Barros Guinle, Maria Isabel, Veeravagu, Anand, Zygourakis, Corinna C., Desai, Atman M., Ratliff, John K.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Medical Association 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9280399/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35816312
http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.22062
_version_ 1784746634593173504
author Jin, Michael C.
Jensen, Michael
Zhou, Zeyi
Rodrigues, Adrian
Ren, Alexander
Barros Guinle, Maria Isabel
Veeravagu, Anand
Zygourakis, Corinna C.
Desai, Atman M.
Ratliff, John K.
author_facet Jin, Michael C.
Jensen, Michael
Zhou, Zeyi
Rodrigues, Adrian
Ren, Alexander
Barros Guinle, Maria Isabel
Veeravagu, Anand
Zygourakis, Corinna C.
Desai, Atman M.
Ratliff, John K.
author_sort Jin, Michael C.
collection PubMed
description IMPORTANCE: Research has uncovered heterogeneity and inefficiencies in the management of idiopathic low back pain, but few studies have examined longitudinal care patterns following newly diagnosed neck pain. OBJECTIVE: To understand health care utilization in patients with new-onset idiopathic neck pain. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This cross-sectional study used nationally sourced longitudinal data from the IBM Watson Health MarketScan claims database (2007-2016). Participants included adult patients with newly diagnosed neck pain, no recent opioid use, and at least 1 year of continuous postdiagnosis follow-up. Exclusion criteria included prior or concomitant diagnosis of traumatic cervical disc dislocation, vertebral fractures, myelopathy, and/or cancer. Only patients with at least 1 year of prediagnosis lookback were included. Data analysis was performed from January 2021 to January 2022. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: The primary outcome of interest was 1-year postdiagnosis health care expenditures, including costs, opioid use, and health care service utilization. Early services were those received within 30 days of diagnosis. Multivariable regression models and regression-adjusted statistics were used. RESULTS: In total, 679 030 patients (310 665 men [45.6%]) met the inclusion criteria, of whom 7858 (1.2%) underwent surgery within 1 year of diagnosis. The mean (SD) age was 44.62 (14.87) years among nonsurgical patients and 49.69 (9.53) years among surgical patients. Adjusting for demographics and comorbidities, 1-year regression-adjusted health care costs were $24 267.55 per surgical patient and $515.69 per nonsurgical patient. Across all health care services, $95 379 949 was accounted for by nonsurgical patients undergoing early imaging who did not receive any additional conservative therapy or epidural steroid injections, for a mean (SD) of $477.53 ($1375.60) per patient and median (IQR) of $120.60 ($20.70-$452.37) per patient. On average, patients not undergoing surgery, physical therapy, chiropractic manipulative therapy, or epidural steroid injection, who underwent either early advanced imaging (magnetic resonance imaging or computed tomography) or both early advanced and radiographic imaging, accumulated significantly elevated health care costs ($850.69 and $1181.67, respectively). Early conservative therapy was independently associated with 24.8% (95% CI, 23.5%-26.2%) lower health care costs. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: In this cross-sectional study, early imaging without subsequent intervention was associated with significantly increased health care spending among patients with newly diagnosed idiopathic neck pain. Early conservative therapy was associated with lower costs, even with increased frequency of therapeutic services, and may have reduced long-term care inefficiency.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9280399
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher American Medical Association
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-92803992022-08-01 Health Care Resource Utilization in Management of Opioid-Naive Patients With Newly Diagnosed Neck Pain Jin, Michael C. Jensen, Michael Zhou, Zeyi Rodrigues, Adrian Ren, Alexander Barros Guinle, Maria Isabel Veeravagu, Anand Zygourakis, Corinna C. Desai, Atman M. Ratliff, John K. JAMA Netw Open Original Investigation IMPORTANCE: Research has uncovered heterogeneity and inefficiencies in the management of idiopathic low back pain, but few studies have examined longitudinal care patterns following newly diagnosed neck pain. OBJECTIVE: To understand health care utilization in patients with new-onset idiopathic neck pain. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This cross-sectional study used nationally sourced longitudinal data from the IBM Watson Health MarketScan claims database (2007-2016). Participants included adult patients with newly diagnosed neck pain, no recent opioid use, and at least 1 year of continuous postdiagnosis follow-up. Exclusion criteria included prior or concomitant diagnosis of traumatic cervical disc dislocation, vertebral fractures, myelopathy, and/or cancer. Only patients with at least 1 year of prediagnosis lookback were included. Data analysis was performed from January 2021 to January 2022. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: The primary outcome of interest was 1-year postdiagnosis health care expenditures, including costs, opioid use, and health care service utilization. Early services were those received within 30 days of diagnosis. Multivariable regression models and regression-adjusted statistics were used. RESULTS: In total, 679 030 patients (310 665 men [45.6%]) met the inclusion criteria, of whom 7858 (1.2%) underwent surgery within 1 year of diagnosis. The mean (SD) age was 44.62 (14.87) years among nonsurgical patients and 49.69 (9.53) years among surgical patients. Adjusting for demographics and comorbidities, 1-year regression-adjusted health care costs were $24 267.55 per surgical patient and $515.69 per nonsurgical patient. Across all health care services, $95 379 949 was accounted for by nonsurgical patients undergoing early imaging who did not receive any additional conservative therapy or epidural steroid injections, for a mean (SD) of $477.53 ($1375.60) per patient and median (IQR) of $120.60 ($20.70-$452.37) per patient. On average, patients not undergoing surgery, physical therapy, chiropractic manipulative therapy, or epidural steroid injection, who underwent either early advanced imaging (magnetic resonance imaging or computed tomography) or both early advanced and radiographic imaging, accumulated significantly elevated health care costs ($850.69 and $1181.67, respectively). Early conservative therapy was independently associated with 24.8% (95% CI, 23.5%-26.2%) lower health care costs. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: In this cross-sectional study, early imaging without subsequent intervention was associated with significantly increased health care spending among patients with newly diagnosed idiopathic neck pain. Early conservative therapy was associated with lower costs, even with increased frequency of therapeutic services, and may have reduced long-term care inefficiency. American Medical Association 2022-07-13 /pmc/articles/PMC9280399/ /pubmed/35816312 http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.22062 Text en Copyright 2022 Jin MC et al. JAMA Network Open. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the CC-BY License.
spellingShingle Original Investigation
Jin, Michael C.
Jensen, Michael
Zhou, Zeyi
Rodrigues, Adrian
Ren, Alexander
Barros Guinle, Maria Isabel
Veeravagu, Anand
Zygourakis, Corinna C.
Desai, Atman M.
Ratliff, John K.
Health Care Resource Utilization in Management of Opioid-Naive Patients With Newly Diagnosed Neck Pain
title Health Care Resource Utilization in Management of Opioid-Naive Patients With Newly Diagnosed Neck Pain
title_full Health Care Resource Utilization in Management of Opioid-Naive Patients With Newly Diagnosed Neck Pain
title_fullStr Health Care Resource Utilization in Management of Opioid-Naive Patients With Newly Diagnosed Neck Pain
title_full_unstemmed Health Care Resource Utilization in Management of Opioid-Naive Patients With Newly Diagnosed Neck Pain
title_short Health Care Resource Utilization in Management of Opioid-Naive Patients With Newly Diagnosed Neck Pain
title_sort health care resource utilization in management of opioid-naive patients with newly diagnosed neck pain
topic Original Investigation
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9280399/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35816312
http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.22062
work_keys_str_mv AT jinmichaelc healthcareresourceutilizationinmanagementofopioidnaivepatientswithnewlydiagnosedneckpain
AT jensenmichael healthcareresourceutilizationinmanagementofopioidnaivepatientswithnewlydiagnosedneckpain
AT zhouzeyi healthcareresourceutilizationinmanagementofopioidnaivepatientswithnewlydiagnosedneckpain
AT rodriguesadrian healthcareresourceutilizationinmanagementofopioidnaivepatientswithnewlydiagnosedneckpain
AT renalexander healthcareresourceutilizationinmanagementofopioidnaivepatientswithnewlydiagnosedneckpain
AT barrosguinlemariaisabel healthcareresourceutilizationinmanagementofopioidnaivepatientswithnewlydiagnosedneckpain
AT veeravaguanand healthcareresourceutilizationinmanagementofopioidnaivepatientswithnewlydiagnosedneckpain
AT zygourakiscorinnac healthcareresourceutilizationinmanagementofopioidnaivepatientswithnewlydiagnosedneckpain
AT desaiatmanm healthcareresourceutilizationinmanagementofopioidnaivepatientswithnewlydiagnosedneckpain
AT ratliffjohnk healthcareresourceutilizationinmanagementofopioidnaivepatientswithnewlydiagnosedneckpain