颈椎退行性脊髓病的非手术治疗与手术治疗:应用卫生经济学技术模拟头对头比较。

IF 2.3 Q2 ORTHOPEDICS
JBJS Open Access Pub Date : 2024-11-21 eCollection Date: 2024-10-01 DOI:10.2106/JBJS.OA.23.00166
Markian Pahuta, Mohamed Sarraj, Jason Busse, Daipayan Guha, Mohit Bhandari
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:当脊椎病变压迫脊髓并导致神经功能障碍时,就会发生颈椎退行性脊髓病(DCM)。由于缺乏有关 DCM 非手术治疗与手术治疗的比较数据,因此很难在治疗方案的共同决策过程中为患者提供支持。我们的目标是综合现有的最佳数据,帮助临床医生和患者权衡不同年龄和疾病严重程度的非手术治疗与手术治疗之间的差异。我们试图回答两个以患者为中心的问题:(1) "如果我接受了非手术治疗,我的脊髓病是否更有可能恶化,或者如果我接受了手术治疗,我是否需要更多的手术?"和(2) "非手术治疗与手术相比,我的生活质量会提高多少?"方法:我们使用了一种健康经济学技术--微观模拟,建立了 DCM 非手术治疗与手术治疗的正面比较模型。我们纳入了现有的最佳数据,对患者的一生进行建模,使用直接比较者,并纳入了自然病史和治疗效果的不确定性:结果:基线年龄≥75 岁的轻度 DCM 患者在接受非手术治疗后神经功能衰退的几率低于接受第二次手术的几率,如果指数手术是前路颈椎椎间盘切除及融合术(ACDF)、颈椎间盘关节成形术(ADR)或后路颈椎减压及器械融合术(PDIF)的话。根据质量调整生命年(QALYs),我们的结果表明,DCM 的手术治疗可能优于非手术治疗。然而,除了中年或更年轻的重度 DCM 患者(根据手术方法不同,年龄≤50 岁至≤60 岁)外,其他所有患者的 QALYs 估计差异的 95% 置信区间下限均为结论:在大多数患者群体中,采用非手术疗法治疗神经系统疾病的几率要高于手术治疗后再进行颈椎手术的几率,但 75 至 80 岁及以上的轻度 DCM 患者除外。此外,平均而言,DCM 的手术治疗往往能提高生活质量。不过,中年以上的 DCM 患者应注意,对生活质量益处的估计非常不确定,证据等级下限为三级:治疗级别 III。有关证据级别的完整描述,请参阅 "作者须知"。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Nonoperative Care Versus Surgery for Degenerative Cervical Myelopathy: An Application of a Health Economic Technique to Simulate Head-to-Head Comparisons.

Background: Degenerative cervical myelopathy (DCM) occurs when spondylotic changes compress the spinal cord and cause neurologic dysfunction. Because of a lack of comparative data on nonoperative care versus surgery for DCM, it has been difficult to support patients through the shared decision-making process regarding treatment options. Our objective was to synthesize the best available data in a manner that helps clinicians and patients to weigh the differences between nonoperative care and surgery at different ages and disease severity. The 2 patient-centered questions we sought to answer were (1) "am I more likely to experience worsening myelopathy with nonoperative care, or need more surgery if I have my myelopathy treated operatively?" and (2) "how much better will my quality of life be with nonoperative care versus surgery?"

Methods: We used a health economic technique, microsimulation, to model head-to-head comparisons of nonoperative care versus surgery for DCM. We incorporated the best available data, modeled patients over a lifetime horizon, used direct comparators, and incorporated uncertainty in both natural history and treatment effect.

Results: Patients with mild DCM at baseline who were ≥75 years of age were less likely to neurologically decline under nonoperative care than to undergo a second surgery if the index surgery was an anterior cervical discectomy and fusion (ACDF), cervical disc arthroplasty (ADR), or posterior cervical decompression and instrumented fusion (PDIF). Using quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs), our results suggest that surgery for DCM may be superior to nonoperative care. However, for all patients except those with severe DCM who are of middle age or younger (depending on the procedure, ≤50 to ≤60 years of age), the lower bound of the 95% confidence interval for the estimated difference in QALYs was <0.

Conclusions: In most patient groups, neurologic progression with nonoperative management is more likely than the need for additional cervical surgery following operative management, with the exception of patients 75 to 80 years of age and older with mild DCM. Furthermore, on average, surgery for DCM tends to improve quality of life. However, patients with DCM who are older than middle age should be aware that the estimates of the quality-of-life benefit are highly uncertain, with a lower bound of <0.

Level of evidence: Therapeutic Level III. See Instructions for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.

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来源期刊
JBJS Open Access
JBJS Open Access Medicine-Surgery
CiteScore
5.00
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0.00%
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77
审稿时长
6 weeks
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