静脉曲张的非热性静脉内手术:健康技术评估。

Q1 Medicine
Ontario Health Technology Assessment Series Pub Date : 2021-06-04 eCollection Date: 2021-01-01
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:静脉曲张是慢性静脉疾病的一部分,是潜在的慢性静脉功能不全的标志。治疗静脉曲张的方法包括全身麻醉下的手术静脉切除,或肿胀麻醉下的静脉内激光(EVLA)或射频消融(RFA)。两种新的非热静脉内手术可以在没有任何肿胀麻醉的情况下关闭静脉,使用机械化学消融(MOCA,机械和化学技术的结合)或氰基丙烯酸酯胶粘剂关闭(CAC)。我们对这些治疗症状性静脉曲张患者的非热静脉内手术进行了健康技术评估,包括对有效性、安全性、成本效益、公共资助MOCA和CAC的预算影响以及患者偏好和价值观的评估。方法:对临床证据进行系统的文献检索。我们使用Cochrane偏倚风险或RoBANS工具评估每个纳入研究的偏倚风险,并根据建议评估、发展和评价分级(GRADE)工作组标准评估证据体的质量。在适当的情况下,使用Review Manager 5.2进行meta分析。我们进行了系统的经济文献检索,并从安大略省卫生部的角度进行了5年时间范围的成本效用分析。在我们的初步经济评估中,我们评估了非热静脉内手术(CAC和MOCA)与外科静脉剥离和热静脉内治疗(EVLA和RFA)的成本效益。我们还分析了安大略省未来5年公共资助的成人症状性静脉曲张非热和热静脉内治疗的预算影响。费用以2020年加元表示。为了了解非热静脉内治疗的潜在价值,我们采访了13名寻求各种治疗方案的静脉曲张患者。我们进行了电话访谈,并定性分析了他们对护理过程的反应和不同治疗方案的影响;参与者唯一经历过的非热治疗是CAC。结果:我们纳入了25篇出版物中报道的19项初步研究,比较MOCA或CAC与至少一种其他有创治疗对症性静脉曲张的效果。没有研究比较MOCA和CAC。基于低到中等质量的证据,MOCA导致的技术结果(静脉关闭和再通)略低于热静脉内消融手术。然而,与RFA(评分:极低至中等)和EVLA(评分:高)相比,临床结果、生活质量改善和患者满意度相似。与RFA和EVLA相比,氰基丙烯酸酯胶粘剂闭合在技术结果、临床结果和生活质量改善方面几乎没有差异(GRADE: Moderate)。患者满意度也可能相似(GRADE: Low)。与热消融相比,非热静脉内手术的恢复时间略有减少(GRADE: Moderate)。与外科静脉剥离相比,CAC的效果非常不确定(GRADE: very low)。任何手术的主要并发症都是罕见的,轻微并发症如预期发生并解决。我们在经济证据综述中纳入了两项部分适用于安大略省背景的欧洲研究。两项研究都发现,与手术静脉剥离和非热疗法相比,热消融(RFA、EVLA或蒸汽静脉硬化)是最具成本效益的治疗方法。我们的成本效用分析显示,在静脉曲张的五种治疗方法中,手术静脉剥离是最无效和最昂贵的治疗方法。静脉内治疗(CAC、MOCA、RFA和EVLA)之间的质量调整生命年(QALYs)差异很小。当每个QALY的支付意愿值为5万美元时,EVLA、CAC、MOCA、RFA和外科静脉剥离的成本效益概率分别为55.6%、18.8%、15.6%、10.0%和0%。当WTP为每QALY 10万美元时,EVLA、CAC、RFA、MOCA和外科静脉剥离的成本效益概率分别为40.2%、30.0%、17.7%、12.1%和0%。公共资助的静脉内手术(包括非热的和热的)将增加治疗的总量,导致5年的预算影响约为1700万美元。与我们交谈的静脉曲张患者积极地报告了他们的CAC手术经验及其结果。他们还描述了获得一系列可用治疗方案的地理和经济障碍。结论:与热消融相比,氰基丙烯酸酯胶粘剂闭合和MOCA产生了相似的患者重要结果,恢复时间稍短。 氰基丙烯酸酯胶粘剂闭合的解剖结果与热静脉内消融相似,但MOCA的技术结果稍差。与手术静脉剥离相比,所有静脉内治疗都更有效,费用更低。如果我们要考虑最具成本效益的策略(每个QALY的WTP低于100,000美元),EVLA最有可能是具有成本效益的。假设在接下来的5年里,符合条件的人数增加了80%,我们估计安大略省静脉曲张的非热和热静脉内治疗的公共资金将从第一年的259万美元到第五年的435万美元不等,5年的预算影响将在1700万美元左右。对于患有静脉曲张的人来说,CAC手术被视为一种积极的治疗方法,可以减轻他们的症状,提高他们的生活质量。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Nonthermal Endovenous Procedures for Varicose Veins: A Health Technology Assessment.

Background: Varicose veins are part of the spectrum of chronic venous disease and are a sign of underlying chronic venous insufficiency. Treatments to address varicose veins include surgical vein removal under general anesthesia, or endovenous laser (EVLA) or radiofrequency ablation (RFA) under tumescent anesthesia. Two newer nonthermal endovenous procedures can close veins without any tumescent anesthesia, using either mechanochemical ablation (MOCA, a combination of mechanical and chemical techniques) or cyanoacrylate adhesive closure (CAC). We conducted a health technology assessment of these nonthermal endovenous procedures for people with symptomatic varicose veins, which included an evaluation of effectiveness, safety, cost-effectiveness, the budget impact of publicly funding MOCA and CAC, and patient preferences and values.

Methods: We performed a systematic literature search of the clinical evidence. We assessed the risk of bias of each included study using the Cochrane Risk of Bias or RoBANS tool, and the quality of the body of evidence according to the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation (GRADE) Working Group criteria. Meta-analysis was conducted using Review Manager 5.2, where appropriate.We performed a systematic economic literature search and conducted a cost-utility analysis with a 5-year time horizon from the perspective of Ontario Ministry of Health. In our primary economic evaluation, we assessed the cost-effectiveness of nonthermal endovenous procedures (CAC and MOCA) compared with surgical vein stripping and thermal endovenous therapies (EVLA and RFA). We also analyzed the budget impact of publicly funding nonthermal and thermal endovenous therapies for adults with symptomatic varicose veins in Ontario over the next 5 years. Costs are expressed in 2020 Canadian dollars.To contextualize the potential value of nonthermal endovenous treatments, we spoke with 13 people with varicose veins who had sought various treatment options. We conducted phone interviews and qualitatively analyzed their responses regarding their care journey and the impact of different treatment options; the only nonthermal treatment that participants had experience with was CAC.

Results: We included 19 primary studies reported in 25 publications comparing either MOCA or CAC with at least one other invasive treatment for symptomatic varicose veins. No studies compared MOCA with CAC. Based on evidence of low to moderate quality, MOCA resulted in slightly poorer technical outcomes (vein closure and recanalization) than thermal endovenous ablation procedures. However, clinical outcomes, quality of life improvement, and patient satisfaction were similar compared with RFA (GRADE: Very low to Moderate) and EVLA (GRADE: High). Cyanoacrylate adhesive closure resulted in little to no difference in technical outcomes, clinical outcomes, and quality of life improvement compared with RFA and EVLA (GRADE: Moderate). Patient satisfaction may also be similar (GRADE: Low). Recovery time was slightly reduced with nonthermal endovenous procedures compared with thermal ablation (GRADE: Moderate). The effect of CAC compared with surgical vein stripping is very uncertain (GRADE: Very low). Major complications of any procedure were rare, with minor complications occurring as expected and resolving.We included two European studies in the economic evidence review that were partially applicable to the Ontario context. Both studies found that thermal ablation procedures (RFA, EVLA, or steam vein sclerosis) were the most cost-effective treatments, compared with surgical vein stripping and nonthermal therapies. Our cost-utility analysis showed that surgical vein stripping is the least effective and most costly treatment among five treatments for varicose veins. Differences in quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) between endovenous treatments (CAC, MOCA, RFA, and EVLA) were small. When the willingness-to-pay (WTP) value was $50,000 per QALY gained, the probabilities of being cost-effective were 55.6%, 18.8%, 15.6%, 10.0%, and 0%, for EVLA, CAC, MOCA, RFA, and surgical vein stripping, respectively. When the WTP was $100,000 per QALY gained, the probabilities of being cost-effective were 40.2%, 30.0%, 17.7%, 12.1%, and 0%, for EVLA, CAC, RFA, MOCA, and surgical vein stripping, respectively. Publicly funding endovenous procedures (both nonthermal and thermal) would increase the total volume of treatments, resulting in a total 5-year budget impact of around $17 million.People with varicose veins with whom we spoke reported positively on their experiences with the CAC procedure and its outcomes. They also described geographic and financial barriers to accessing the range of available treatment options.

Conclusions: Cyanoacrylate adhesive closure and MOCA produced similar patient-important outcomes, and slightly shorter recovery compared with thermal ablation. Cyanoacrylate adhesive closure yielded similar anatomical outcomes as thermal endovenous ablation, but the technical outcomes of MOCA were slightly poorer.Compared with surgical vein stripping, all endovenous treatments were more effective and less expensive. If we were to look at the most cost-effective strategy (at WTP less than $100,000 per QALY), EVLA is most likely to be cost-effective. Assuming an 80% increase in the number of eligible people over the next 5 years, we estimate that publicly funding nonthermal and thermal endovenous treatments for varicose veins in Ontario would range from $2.59 million in year 1 to $4.35 million in year 5, and that the total 5-year budget impact would be around $17 million.For people with varicose veins, the CAC procedure was seen as a positive treatment method that reduced their symptoms and improved their quality of life.

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来源期刊
Ontario Health Technology Assessment Series
Ontario Health Technology Assessment Series Medicine-Medicine (miscellaneous)
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