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Trauma

COST-EFFECTIVENESS ANALYSIS OF PRIMARY TOTAL ANKLE REPLACEMENT SURGERY

Scottish Committee for Orthopaedics and Trauma (SCOT) meeting, Crieff, Scotland, January 2020.



Abstract

We report a cost-effectiveness analysis of Primary Total Ankle Replacements (TAR). In addition, we looked for factors that could be predictors of increased gain in Quality-Adjusted Life Years (QALYs).

Pre-operative and six-month post-operative data for TAR was obtained over seven-and-a-half-years in NHS Lothian. The EuroQol general health questionnaire (EQ-5D-3L) measured health-related Quality of Life and the Manchester-Oxford Foot Questionnaire (MOXFQ) measured joint function. Predictors, tested for significance with QALYs gained, were pre-operative scores and demographic data including age, gender, BMI and Deprivation category. Continuous variables were assessed with Pearson correlation coefficients, Deprivation and BMI categories with Boxplots and gender with the Mann-Whitney U test.

The 74-patient cohort [Mean age 68.03 (SD 8.61), 60.8% male] had 49% classed as obese or higher. Cost per QALY gained was £3841, rising to £9202 when annual 3.5% reduction in health gains and 1.9% revision rates were included. Lower pre-operative EQ-5D-3L index correlated significantly with increased QALYs gained (p <0.01), all other predictors returned insignificant results (p >0.05).

Primary TAR has proven very cost-effective in treating end-stage ankle arthritis. Pre-operative EQ-5D-3L is the most promising predictor of QALYs gained identified.


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