Cost-effectiveness analysis of Coblation versus mechanical shaver debridement in patients following knee chondroplasty. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • BACKGROUND: To compare costs and outcomes following knee chondroplasty with Coblation versus mechanical shaver debridement (MSD) in patients with grade III articular cartilage lesions of the knee. METHODS: A decision-analytic model was developed to compare costs and outcomes of the two methods from a US payer perspective. We used published clinical data from a single-center randomized clinical trial (RCT) designed to compare outcomes between Coblation and MSD in patients with grade III articular cartilage lesions of the medial femoral condyle. Following primary knee chondroplasty, patients experienced either treatment success (no additional surgery required) or required a revision over the 4 year follow-up period. Costs associated with the initial chondroplasty, physical therapy sessions through the 6 week postoperative period, and revision rates at 4 years post-surgery were estimated using 2018 US Medicare Physician Fee Schedule. Sensitivity analyses including a 10 year time horizon and threshold analyses were performed to test the robustness of the model. RESULTS: The estimated total cost per patient was $4614 and $7886 for Coblation and MSD, respectively, resulting in cost-savings of $3272 in favor of Coblation, making it a dominant strategy because of lower costs and improved clinical outcomes. Threshold analysis showed that Coblation remained dominant even when revision rates were assumed to increase from the base case rate of 14-66%. Sensitivity analyses showed that cost-saving results were insensitive to variations in revision rates, number of physical therapy sessions and the time horizon used. CONCLUSION: Coblation chondroplasty is a cost-saving procedure compared with MSD in the treatment of patients with grade III articular cartilage lesions of the knee.

publication date

  • October 16, 2020

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC7566123

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85092691544

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1186/s12962-020-00240-w

PubMed ID

  • 33088223

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 18