header advert
Results 1 - 3 of 3
Results per page:
Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 5, Issue 3 | Pages 218 - 226
15 Mar 2024
Voigt JD Potter BK Souza J Forsberg J Melton D Hsu JR Wilke B

Aims

Prior cost-effectiveness analyses on osseointegrated prosthesis for transfemoral unilateral amputees have analyzed outcomes in non-USA countries using generic quality of life instruments, which may not be appropriate when evaluating disease-specific quality of life. These prior analyses have also focused only on patients who had failed a socket-based prosthesis. The aim of the current study is to use a disease-specific quality of life instrument, which can more accurately reflect a patient’s quality of life with this condition in order to evaluate cost-effectiveness, examining both treatment-naïve and socket refractory patients.

Methods

Lifetime Markov models were developed evaluating active healthy middle-aged male amputees. Costs of the prostheses, associated complications, use/non-use, and annual costs of arthroplasty parts and service for both a socket and osseointegrated (OPRA) prosthesis were included. Effectiveness was evaluated using the questionnaire for persons with a transfemoral amputation (Q-TFA) until death. All costs and Q-TFA were discounted at 3% annually. Sensitivity analyses on those cost variables which affected a change in treatment (OPRA to socket, or socket to OPRA) were evaluated to determine threshold values. Incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) were calculated.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_9 | Pages 83 - 83
1 May 2017
Spinelli M Piccioli A Maccauro G Forsberg J Wedin R
Full Access

Background

Metastatic bone patients who require surgery needs to be evaluated in order to maximise quality of life and avoiding functional impairment, minimising the risks connected to the surgical procedures. The best surgical procedure needs to be tailored on survival estimation. There are no current available tool or method to evaluate survival estimation with accuracy in patients with bone metastasis. We recently developed a clinical decision support tool, capable of estimating the likelihood of survival at 3 and 12 months following surgery for patients with operable skeletal metastases. After making it publicly available on www.PATHFx.org, we attempted to externally validate it using independent, international data.

Methods

We collected data from patients treated at 13 Italian orthopaedic oncology referral centers between 2008 and 2012, then applied to PATHFx, which generated a probability of survival at three and 12-months for each patient. We assessed accuracy using the area under the receiver-operating characteristic curve (AUC), clinical utility using Decision Curve Analysis DCA), and compared the Italian patient data to the training set (United States) and first external validation set (Scandinavia).


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 97-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 5 - 5
1 Jun 2015
Edwards D Karunaratne A Forsberg J Davis T Clasper J Bull A
Full Access

Heterotopic ossification (HO) is the formation of lamellar bone in extra-skeletal soft tissues. Its exact pathogenic mechanism remains elusive. Previous studies demonstrate observation only of HO at the microscopic scale. This study uses scanning electron microscopy (SEM), Back-scatter electron (BSE) imaging and mechanical testing to detail the organic and non-organic elements of HO, compared to normal bone, to guide stem cell and bio-modelling research into HO. Samples analysed were 5 military blast related HO patients, 5 control cadaveric samples (age and sex matched). Samples were imaged using SEM, BSE and the I13 beam Synchrotron x-ray diffraction scanner using validated quantitative and qualitative techniques of measurement. Appearances seen in HO compared to normal bone were characterised by the presence of a hyper-vascular network and high lacunae (osteocyte) counts, two distinct zones of bone mineral density distribution, with a tendency for hypermineralisation with kurtosis of the grey scale plots (mineral content as a weight percentage of Ca2+ was calibrated to atomic weight of C, Al and HA). Direction of dependence and collagen orientation in HO suggest isotropic properties. This research demonstrates that HO is bone, however its characteristics suggest a high metabolic turnover and disorganised ultra-structure consistent with an inflammatory origin.