Cost-effectiveness of immediate total-body CT in patients with severe trauma (REACT-2 trial)

Author:

Treskes K1ORCID,Sierink J C1,Edwards M J R2,Beuker B J A3,Van Lieshout E M M4,Hohmann J5,Saltzherr T P6,Hollmann M W7,Van Dieren S8,Goslings J C19,Dijkgraaf M G W10,Luitse J S,Schepers T,Beenen L F M,Tromp T N,Brink M,El Moumni M,Harbers J S,Patka P,den Hartog D,Hagenaars T,

Affiliation:

1. Trauma Unit, Department of Surgery, Amsterdam University Medical Centre, Location AMC, Amsterdam, the Netherlands

2. Trauma Unit, Department of Surgery, Radboud University Medical Centre, Nijmegen, the Netherlands

3. Trauma Unit, Department of Surgery, University Medical Centre Groningen, Groningen, the Netherlands

4. Trauma Unit, Department of Surgery, Erasmus MC, University Medical Centre Rotterdam, Rotterdam, the Netherlands

5. Department of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, University Hospital Basel, Basel, Switzerland

6. Department of Surgery, Haaglanden Medical Centre, Den Haag, the Netherlands

7. Department of Anaesthesiology, Amsterdam UMC, Location AMC, Amsterdam, The Netherlands

8. Department of Surgery, Amsterdam University Medical Centre, Location AMC, Amsterdam, the Netherlands

9. Department of Surgery, Onze Lieve Vrouwe Gasthuis, Amsterdam, the Netherlands

10. Department of Epidemiology and Data Science, Amsterdam University Medical Centre, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, the Netherlands

Abstract

Abstract Background The effect of immediate total-body CT (iTBCT) on health economic aspects in patients with severe trauma is an underreported issue. This study determined the cost-effectiveness of iTBCT compared with conventional radiological imaging with selective CT (standard work-up (STWU)) during the initial trauma evaluation. Methods In this multicentre RCT, adult patients with a high suspicion of severe injury were randomized in-hospital to iTBCT or STWU. Hospital healthcare costs were determined for the first 6 months after the injury. The probability of iTBCT being cost-effective was calculated for various levels of willingness-to-pay per extra patient alive. Results A total of 928 Dutch patients with complete clinical follow-up were included. Mean costs of hospital care were €25 809 (95 per cent bias-corrected and accelerated (bca) c.i. €22 617 to €29 137) for the iTBCT group and €26 155 (€23 050 to €29 344) for the STWU group, a difference per patient in favour of iTBCT of €346 (€4987 to €4328) (P = 0.876). Proportions of patients alive at 6 months were not different. The proportion of patients alive without serious morbidity was 61.6 per cent in the iTBCT group versus 66.7 per cent in the STWU group (difference −5.1 per cent; P = 0.104). The probability of iTBCT being cost-effective in keeping patients alive remained below 0.56 for the whole group, but was higher in patients with multiple trauma (0.8–0.9) and in those with traumatic brain injury (more than 0.9). Conclusion Economically, from a hospital healthcare provider perspective, iTBCT should be the diagnostic strategy of first choice in patients with multiple trauma or traumatic brain injury.

Funder

Netherlands Organization for Health Research and Development

REACT-2 trial

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Surgery

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