Health-economic evaluation of orthogeriatric co-management for patients with pelvic or vertebral fragility fractures

BMC Geriatr. 2024 Aug 5;24(1):657. doi: 10.1186/s12877-024-05225-5.

Abstract

Background: Orthogeriatric co-management (OGCM) addresses the special needs of geriatric fracture patients. Most of the research on OGCM focused on hip fractures while results concerning other severe fractures are rare. We conducted a health-economic evaluation of OGCM for pelvic and vertebral fractures.

Methods: In this retrospective cohort study, we used German health and long-term care insurance claims data and included cases of geriatric patients aged 80 years or older treated in an OGCM (OGCM group) or a non-OGCM hospital (non-OGCM group) due to pelvic or vertebral fractures in 2014-2018. We analyzed life years gained, fracture-free life years gained, healthcare costs, and cost-effectiveness within 1 year. We applied entropy balancing, weighted gamma and two-part models. We calculated incremental cost-effectiveness ratios and cost-effectiveness acceptability curves.

Results: We included 21,036 cases with pelvic (71.2% in the OGCM, 28.8% in the non-OGCM group) and 33,827 with vertebral fractures (72.8% OGCM, 27.2% non-OGCM group). 4.5-5.9% of the pelvic and 31.8-33.8% of the vertebral fracture cases were treated surgically. Total healthcare costs were significantly higher after treatment in OGCM compared to non-OGCM hospitals for both fracture cohorts. For both fracture cohorts, a 95% probability of cost-effectiveness was not exceeded for a willingness-to-pay of up to €150,000 per life year or €150,000 per fracture-free life year gained.

Conclusion: We did not obtain distinct benefits of treatment in an OGCM hospital. Assigning cases to OGCM or non-OGCM group on hospital level might have underestimated the effect of OGCM as not all patients in the OGCM group have received OGCM.

Keywords: Health-economic evaluation; Insurance claims data; Orthogeriatric co-management; Pelvic fractures; Vertebral fractures.

MeSH terms

  • Aged, 80 and over
  • Cost-Benefit Analysis* / methods
  • Female
  • Germany / epidemiology
  • Health Care Costs
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Osteoporotic Fractures* / economics
  • Osteoporotic Fractures* / epidemiology
  • Osteoporotic Fractures* / therapy
  • Pelvic Bones / injuries
  • Retrospective Studies
  • Spinal Fractures* / economics
  • Spinal Fractures* / therapy