Author:
Restrepo Marcos I.,Anzueto Antonio,Arroliga Alejandro C.,Afessa Bekele,Atkinson Mark J.,Ho Ngoc J.,Schinner Regina,Bracken Ronald L.,Kollef Marin H.
Abstract
Objectives.
To characterize the current economic burden of ventilator-associated
pneumonia (VAP) and to determine which services increase the cost of VAP in
North American hospitals.
Design and Setting.
We performed a retrospective, matched cohort analysis of mechanically
ventilated patients enrolled in the North American Silver-Coated Endotracheal
Tube (NASCENT) study, a prospective, randomized study conducted from 2002 to
2006 in 54 medical centers, including 45 teaching institutions
(83.3%).
Methods.
Case patients with microbiologically confirmed VAP
(n = 30) were identified from 542 study
participants with claims data and were matched by use of a primary diagnostic
code, and subsequently by the Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II
score, to control patients without VAP (n = 90).
Costs were estimated by applying hospital-specific cost-to-charge ratios based
on all-payer inpatient costs associated with VAP diagnosis-related
groups.
Results.
Median total charges per patient were $198,200 for case patients and
$96,540 for matched control patients (P
<.001); corresponding median hospital costs were $76,730 for case
patients and $41,250 for control patients (P =
.001). After adjusting for diagnosis-related group payments, median losses to
hospitals were $32,140 for case patients and $19,360 for control patients
(P = .151). The median duration of intubation was
longer for case patients than for control patients (10.1 days vs 4.7 days;
P < .001), as were the median duration of
intensive care unit stay (18.5 days vs 8.0 days; P
< .001) and the median duration of hospitalization (26.5 days vs 14.0
days; P < .001). Examples of services likely
to be directly related to VAP and having higher median costs for case patients
were hospital care (P < .05) and respiratory
therapy (P < .05).
Conclusions.
VAP was associated with increased hospital costs, longer duration of
hospital stay, and a higher number of hospital services being affected, which
underscores the need for bundled measures to prevent VAP.
Trial Registration.
NASCENT study ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00148642.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Microbiology (medical),Epidemiology
Cited by
96 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献