Surgical Management of the Elderly With Traumatic Cervical Spinal Cord Injury

Author:

Furlan Julio C.123,Craven Beverly Catharine23,Fehlings Michael G.44

Affiliation:

1. Division of Neurology, Department of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada;

2. Division of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Department of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada;

3. Lyndhurst Centre, Toronto Rehabilitation Institute, University Health Network, Toronto, Ontario, Canada;

4. Division of Neurosurgery, Department of Surgery, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada;

Abstract

Abstract BACKGROUND Aging of the population has modified the epidemiology of traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI) as evidenced by the establishment of a bimodal distribution of injuries with increased frequency of fall-related injuries among the elderly. OBJECTIVE To assess the economic impact of older age (65 years of age and older), using a cost-utility analysis, in the context of acute surgical management and rehabilitation of traumatic cervical SCI, given the paucity of economic studies involving elderly individuals with SCI. METHODS The cost-utility analysis was performed from the perspective of a public health care insurer. A time horizon of 6 months from SCI onset was used. Costs were estimated in 2014 US dollars. Utilities were generated from the Surgical Timing in Acute Spinal Cord Injury study. RESULTS The baseline analysis indicated that surgical and rehabilitative management of acute cervical SCI in the elderly (n = 17) is costlier, but similarly effective, than that in younger adults (n = 47). When considering acute spinal surgical management and rehabilitation of younger adults with SCI as the baseline, the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio analysis revealed an additional cost of $5 655 557 per quality-adjusted life-year gained when managing elderly patients with traumatic cervical SCI. The probabilistic analysis confirmed that spinal surgery in the elderly is costlier, but similarly effective, in younger adults after SCI, even though there is no definitive dominance. CONCLUSION This economic analysis indicates that surgical management and rehabilitation of acute traumatic cervical SCI in the elderly are costlier but similarly effective compared with younger adults with similar impairment.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Surgery

Reference29 articles.

1. Global incidence and prevalence of traumatic spinal cord injury;Furlan;Can J Neurol Sci,2013

2. National hospitalization burden associated with spinal cord injuries in the United States;Mahabaleshwarkar;Spinal Cord,2014

3. The Burden of Neurological Diseases, Disorders and Injuries in Canada;CIHI,2007

4. The economic burden of traumatic spinal cord injury in Canada;Krueger;Chronic Dis Inj Can,2013

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