Treatment patterns and outcomes of Medicare enrolees who developed venous leg ulcers

Author:

Tettelbach William H12345,Driver Vickie67,Oropallo Alisha89,Kelso Martha R10,Niezgoda Jeffrey A11,Wahab Naz12131415,De Jong Julie L16,Hubbs Brandon16,Forsyth R Allyn1617,Magee Gregory18

Affiliation:

1. HCA Healthcare, Mountain Division, US

2. College of Podiatric Medicine, Western University of Health Sciences, US

3. Duke University School of Medicine, Department of Anesthesiology, US

4. Association for the Advancement of Wound Care, US

5. American Professional Wound Care Association, US

6. Wound Care and Hyperbaric Centers at INOVA Healthcare, US

7. Wound Care Collaborative Community, US

8. Comprehensive Wound Healing Center, US

9. Hyperbarics at Northwell Health, US

10. Wound Care Plus, LLC, MO, US

11. AZH Wound & Vascular Centers, US

12. Wound Care Experts, NV, US

13. HCA Mountain View Hospital, US

14. Roseman University College of Medicine, US

15. Common Spirit Dignity Hospitals, US

16. MiMedx Group Inc., GA, US

17. Department of Biology, San Diego State University, US

18. Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, US

Abstract

Objective: To retrospectively evaluate the comorbidities, treatment patterns and outcomes of Medicare enrolees who developed venous leg ulcers (VLUs). Method: Medicare Limited Data Standard Analytic Hospital Inpatient and Outpatient Department Files were used to follow patients who received medical care for a VLU between 1 October 2015 and 2 October 2019. Patients diagnosed with chronic venous insufficiency (CVI) and a VLU were propensity matched into four groups based on their treatment regimen. Episode claims were used to document demographics, comorbidities and treatments of Medicare enrolees who developed VLUs, as well as important outcomes, such as time to ulcer closure, rates of complications and hospital utilisation rates. Outcomes were compared across key propensity-matched groups. Results: In total, 42% of Medicare enrolees with CVI (n=1,225,278), developed at least one VLU during the study, and 79% had their episode claim completed within one year. However, 59% of patients developed another VLU during the study period. This analysis shows that only 38.4% of VLU episodes received documented VLU conservative care treatment. Propensity-matched episodes that received an advanced treatment or high-cost skin substitutes for a wound which had not progressed by 30 days demonstrated the best outcomes when their cellular, acellular, matrix-like product (CAMP) treatment was applied weekly or biweekly (following parameters for use). Complications such as rates of infection (33%) and emergency department visits (>50%) decreased among patients who received an advanced treatment (following parameters for use). Conclusion: Medicare enrolees with CVI have diverse comorbidities and many do not receive sufficient management, which contributes to high rates of VLUs and subsequent complications. Medicare patients at risk of a VLU who receive early identification and advanced CAMP treatment demonstrated improved quality of life and significantly reduced healthcare resource utilisation.

Publisher

Mark Allen Group

Subject

Nursing (miscellaneous),Fundamentals and skills

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