AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to assess the cost-effectiveness of general versus selective ultrasound screening for developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH) in newborns, using data from a trial involving nearly 12,000 infants.
  • While total program costs were similar across screening strategies, general ultrasound screening resulted in fewer cases requiring hospitalization and surgery, leading to lower costs associated with late-stage DDH treatment.
  • The findings suggest that generalizing these results to other centers could provide valuable insights into optimizing screening programs and potentially reducing overall healthcare costs.

Article Abstract

Objective: To compare the cost-effectiveness of adding either a general or a selective ultrasound screening program to the routine clinical examination for developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH) with use of the data from a large, randomized study of 11,925 newborns.

Methods: Our previous study comparing the clinical outcomes of three strategies for screening infants for DDH suggested (but results were not statistically significant) that general ultrasound screening resulted in fewer children requiring hospitalization and surgery for DDH than did a strategy based on ultrasound screening of the 11.8% of infants considered to be at increased risk of DDH or one with no ultrasound screening. General ultrasound screening led to early splinting of 3.4% of the newborns compared with 2.0% for the selectively screened group and 1.8% for the group not receiving ultrasound screening. Using these data, we decided on sequences and intervals of diagnostic and therapeutic actions considered to be sufficient for each regimen. We applied estimates of the costs of screening, treatment of DDH discovered early and late, and follow-up examinations to arrive at total program costs for each strategy.

Results: Total program costs were similar for each of the three screening strategies (costs varied by < 5%). However, treatment of late cases accounted for only 22% of total costs in the group undergoing general screening vs 65% in the two latter groups. The cost estimates were sensitive to several variables. Application of the data to a hypothetical ultrasound program in which all girls and only boys at increased risk for DDH underwent an ultrasound examination showed substantially reduced total program costs.

Conclusions: Application of costs from other centers to our data regarding frequency of clinical outcomes may yield different comparative program costs. If the findings of our clinical study can be generalized to other centers, a strategy of screening all girls and boys with risk factors for DDH may be the most cost-effective approach.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

ultrasound screening
24
screening
12
total program
12
program costs
12
screening strategies
8
developmental dysplasia
8
dysplasia hip
8
ultrasound
8
clinical outcomes
8
general ultrasound
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!