Affiliation:
1. Cedar Associates LLC, Menlo Park; CA; 4 Department of Internal Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA
Abstract
Background: Vertebral compression fractures (VCFs) are the most common osteoporotic fractures
and cause persistent pain, kyphotic deformity, weight loss, depression, reduced quality of life, and
even death. Current surgical approaches for the treatment of VCF include vertebroplasty (VP) and
balloon kyphoplasty (BK). The Kiva® VCF Treatment System (Kiva System) is a next-generation
alternative surgical intervention in which a percutaneously introduced nitinol Osteo Coil guidewire
is advanced through a deployment cannula and subsequently a PEEK Implant is implanted
incrementally and fully coiled in the vertebral body. The Kiva System’s effectiveness for the treatment
of VCF has been evaluated in a large randomized controlled trial, the Kiva Safety and Effectiveness
Trial (KAST). The Kiva System was non-inferior to BK with respect to pain reduction (70.8% vs.
71.8% in Visual Analogue Scale) and physical function restoration (38.1 % vs. 42.2% reduction in
Oswestry Disability Index) while using less bone cement. The economic impact of the Kiva system
has yet to be analyzed.
Objective: To analyze hospital resource use and costs of the Kiva System over 2 years for the
treatment of VCF compared to BK.
Setting: A representative US hospital.
Study Design: Economic analysis of the KAST randomized trial, focusing on hospital resource use
and costs.
Methods: The analysis was conducted from a hospital perspective and utilized clinical data
from KAST as well as unit-cost data from the published literature. The cost of initial VCF surgery,
reoperation cost, device market cost, and other medical costs were compared between the Kiva
System and BK. The relative risk reduction rate in adjacent-level fracture with Kiva [31.6% (95% CI:
-22.5%, 61.9%)] demonstrated in KAST was used in this analysis.
Results: With 304 vertebral augmentation procedures performed in a representative U.S. hospital
over 2 years, the Kiva System will produce a direct medical cost savings of $1,118 per patient
and $280,876 per hospital. This cost saving with the Kiva System was attributable to 19 reduced
adjacent-level fractures with the Kiva System.
Limitations: This study does not compare the Kiva System with VP or any other non-surgical
procedures for the treatment of VCF.
Conclusion: This first-ever economic analysis of the KAST data showed that the Kiva System for
vertebral augmentation is hospital resource and cost saving over BK in a hospital setting over 2
years. These savings are attributable to reduced risk of developing adjacent-level fractures with the
Kiva System compared to BK.
Key words: Vertebral compression fracture, vertebral augmentation, osteoporosis, adjacent-level
fractures, kyphoplasty, balloon kyphoplasty, Kiva System
Publisher
American Society of Interventional Pain Physicians
Subject
Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine
Cited by
1 articles.
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