Cost-effectiveness of transfers to centers with neurological intensive care units after intracerebral hemorrhage.

Stroke

From the Departments of Neurosurgery (J.J.F., L.B.M.), Neurology (V.K., A.M.), Biostatistics (L.B.M.), Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation (M.P.), and the Stroke Program (L.B.M., J.F.B.), University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; and Department of Neurology, Bronson Methodist Hospital, Kalamazoo, MI (J.J.F.).

Published: January 2015

Background And Purpose: Our aim was to estimate the cost-effectiveness of transferring patients with intracerebral hemorrhage from centers without specialized neurological intensive care units (neuro-ICUs) to centers with neuro-ICUs.

Methods: Decision analytic models were developed for the lifetime horizons. Model inputs were derived from the best available data, informed by a variety of previous cost-effectiveness models of stroke. The effect of neuro-ICU care on functional outcomes was modeled in 3 scenarios. A favorable outcomes scenario was modeled based on the best observational data and compared with moderately favorable and least-favorable outcomes scenarios. Health benefits were measured in quality-adjusted life years (QALYs), and costs were estimated from a societal perspective. Costs were combined with QALYs gained to generate incremental cost-effectiveness ratios. One-way sensitivity analysis and Monte Carlo simulations were performed to test robustness of the model assumptions.

Results: Transferring patients to centers with neuro-ICUs yielded an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio for the lifetime horizon of $47,431 per QALY, $91,674 per QALY, and $380,358 per QALY for favorable, moderately favorable, and least-favorable scenarios, respectively. Models were robust at a willingness-to-pay threshold of $100,000 per QALY, with 95.5%, 75.0%, and 2.1% of simulations below the threshold for favorable, moderately favorable, and least-favorable scenarios, respectively.

Conclusions: Transferring patients with intracerebral hemorrhage to centers with specialized neuro-ICUs is cost-effective if observational estimates of the neuro-ICU-based functional outcome distribution are accurate. If future work confirms these functional outcome distributions, then a strong societal rationale exists to build systems of care designed to transfer intracerebral hemorrhage patients to specialized neuro-ICUs.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4276522PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/STROKEAHA.114.006653DOI Listing

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