Umile Giuseppe Longo, Alessandro Mazzola, Marco Edoardo Cardinale, Sergio De Salvatore, Ilaria Piergentili, Robert Marx, Rocco Papalia
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to determine the incidence and hospitalization trends of meniscectomy in Italy from 2001 to 2016. A secondary aim was to investigate the economic burden of the disease on the national healthcare system.
Methods: Data were extracted from the Italian Ministry of Health's National Hospital Discharge Reports. Diagnoses are coded according to the ICD-9-CM. Meniscectomy was defined by the following main procedure codes: 806, 8026 and 8145. By dividing the number of annual cases by the size of the adult population reported annually by ISTAT, incidence rates were computed.
Results: Overall, 1,454,891 meniscectomies were performed in the study period between 2001 and 2016. The incidence was 178 procedures for every 100,000 Italian inhabitants. The incidence declined from 202 in 2001 to 106 in 2016. Males were the largest portion of patients undergoing surgery (68.2%). The average age of patients was 46.59 ± 15.07. A decreasing trend in length of hospital stay was observed over the study period. The annual average cost per 100,000 inhabitants was EUR 491.219 ± 122.148 with a range from EUR 291,500 ± 79.500 in 2016 to EUR 610,500 ± 166.500 in 2004.
Conclusion: In Italy, the number of meniscectomies performed in the adult population has almost halved over the study period. Results of the present study in the Italian population seem to reflect how the clinical evidence basis affects surgical technique selection. The economic burden of meniscectomy is relevant in Italy with an estimated expenditure from EUR 181.861.375 to 318.257.406 between 2001 and 2016.
期刊介绍:
Few other areas of orthopedic surgery and traumatology have undergone such a dramatic evolution in the last 10 years as knee surgery, arthroscopy and sports traumatology. Ranked among the top 33% of journals in both Orthopedics and Sports Sciences, the goal of this European journal is to publish papers about innovative knee surgery, sports trauma surgery and arthroscopy. Each issue features a series of peer-reviewed articles that deal with diagnosis and management and with basic research. Each issue also contains at least one review article about an important clinical problem. Case presentations or short notes about technical innovations are also accepted for publication.
The articles cover all aspects of knee surgery and all types of sports trauma; in addition, epidemiology, diagnosis, treatment and prevention, and all types of arthroscopy (not only the knee but also the shoulder, elbow, wrist, hip, ankle, etc.) are addressed. Articles on new diagnostic techniques such as MRI and ultrasound and high-quality articles about the biomechanics of joints, muscles and tendons are included. Although this is largely a clinical journal, it is also open to basic research with clinical relevance.
Because the journal is supported by a distinguished European Editorial Board, assisted by an international Advisory Board, you can be assured that the journal maintains the highest standards.
Official Clinical Journal of the European Society of Sports Traumatology, Knee Surgery and Arthroscopy (ESSKA).