Sneh Sonaiya, Raj Patel, Dushyant Singh Dahiya, Shahryar Khan, Charmy Parikh, Mark Stasiewicz, Pranav D Patel, Kyaw Min Tun, Bradley Confer, Harshit S Khara, Sumant Inamdar, Vignan Manne, Babu P Mohan, Douglas G Adler
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background and aims: For small colorectal polyps, Cold Snare Polypectomy (CSP) carries a higher risk of immediate post-polypectomy bleeding (IPPB) compared to Hot Snare Polypectomy (HSP), but is associated with a significantly lower risk of delayed post-polypectomy bleeding (DPPB). Given these trade-offs, we evaluated the cost-effectiveness of CSP versus HSP for small (4-10 mm) pedunculated colorectal polyps.
Methods: Cost-effectiveness analysis was conducted over a 2-week time horizon using a decision tree model, based on the Multicenter Randomized Taiwan Cold Polypectomy Study and published literature. Incremental Cost-Effectiveness Ratio (ICER) was calculated for a base case patient undergoing CSP vs HSP, with analysis performed using TreeAge Pro Healthcare 2024.
Results: IPPB was defined as perioperative bleeding requiring clipping, while DPPB referred to bleeding within 2 weeks requiring transfusion or endoscopic intervention. DPPB was evaluated at the patient level (386 participants: 192 CSP, 194 HSP), and IPPB at the polyp level (647 polyps: 306 CSP, 341 HSP). In the base case (61.8-year-old with a ≤10 mm pedunculated polyp), CSP vs HSP yielded an ICER of $35,684/QALY. Sensitivity analyses showed CSP remained cost-effective when IPPB risk following CSP was <21.64% or DPPB risk with HSP exceeded 0.76%.
Conclusion: CSP is cost-effective compared to HSP for small pedunculated polyps at a willingness-to-pay threshold of $100,000/QALY. Despite a higher IPPB risk, CSP's lower DPPB risk underlies its favorable economic profile. Our findings support CSP as the preferred technique for small pedunculated polyps, while emphasizing that patient- and polyp-specific clinical factors should be considered alongside cost-effectiveness in practice.
期刊介绍:
Gastrointestinal Endoscopy is a journal publishing original, peer-reviewed articles on endoscopic procedures for studying, diagnosing, and treating digestive diseases. It covers outcomes research, prospective studies, and controlled trials of new endoscopic instruments and treatment methods. The online features include full-text articles, video and audio clips, and MEDLINE links. The journal serves as an international forum for the latest developments in the specialty, offering challenging reports from authorities worldwide. It also publishes abstracts of significant articles from other clinical publications, accompanied by expert commentaries.