Affiliation:
1. The King’s Fund, London, W1G 0AN, UK
2. Imperial College London, Department of Primary Care and Public Health, Charing Cross Hospital Campus, London W6 8RP, UK
Abstract
Objectives To demonstrate potential uses of nationally collected patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) data to estimate cost-effectiveness of hernia surgery. Design Cost-utility model populated with national PROMs, National Reference Cost and Hospital Episodes Statistics data. Setting Hospitals in England that provided elective inguinal hernia repair surgery for NHS patients between 1 April 2009 and 31 March 2010. Participants Patients >18 years undergoing NHS-funded elective hernia surgery in English hospitals who completed PROMs questionnaires. Main outcome measures Change in quality-adjusted life year (QALY) following surgery; cost per QALY of surgery by acute provider hospital; health gain and cost per QALY by surgery type received (laparoscopic or open hernia repair). Results The casemix-adjusted, discounted (at 3.5%) and degraded (over 25 years) mean change in QALYs following elective hernia repair surgery is 0.826 (95% CI, 0.793–0.859) compared to a counterfactual of no treatment. Patients undergoing laparoscopic surgery show a significantly greater gain in health-related quality of life (EQ-5D index change, 0.0915; 95% CI, 0.0850–0.0979) with an estimated gain of 0.923 QALYS (95% CI, 0.859–0.988) compared to those having open repair (EQ-5D index change, 0.0806; 95% CI, 0.0771–0.0841) at 0.817 QALYS (95% CI, 0.782–0.852). The average cost of hernia surgery in England is £1554, representing a mean cost per QALY of £1881. The mean cost of laparoscopic and open hernia surgery is equivocal (£1421 vs. £1426 respectively) but laparoscopies appear to offer higher cost-utility at £1540 per QALY, compared to £1746 per QALY for open surgery. Conclusions Routine PROMs data derived from NHS patients could be usefully analyzed to estimate health outcomes and cost-effectiveness of interventions to inform decision-making. This analysis suggests elective hernia surgery offers value-for-money, and laparoscopic repair is more clinically effective and generates higher cost-utility than open surgery.
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47 articles.
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