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Article
The cost of complications following major resection of malignant neoplasia
Journal of gastrointestinal surgery
  • Cheryl K Zogg, , Harvard Medical School and Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health
  • Taylor D Ottesen, ale School of Medicine, 67 Cedar Street, New Haven, CT, 06520, USA
  • Kareem J Kebaish, Yale School of Medicine, 67 Cedar Street, New Haven, CT, 06520, USA
  • Anoop Galivanche, Yale School of Medicine, 67 Cedar Street, New Haven, CT, 06520, USA
  • Shilpa Murthy, Harvard Medical School and Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health
  • Navin R Changoor, Harvard Medical School and Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health
  • Donald L Zogg, Minnesota Gastroenterology, P.A., Saint Paul, MN, USA
  • Timothy M Pawlik, The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, Columbus, OH, USA
  • Adil H Haider, Harvard Medical School and Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health
Publication Date
11-1-2018
Document Type
Article
Abstract

Background: Rising healthcare costs have led to increased focus on the need to achieve a higher "value of care." As value-maximization efforts expand to include more complex surgical patients, evidence to support meaningful implementation of complication-based initiatives is lacking. The objective of this study was to compare incremental costs of complications following major gastrointestinal (GI) resections for organ-specific malignant neoplasia using nationally representative data.
Methods: National (Nationwide) Inpatient Sample data, 2001-2014, were queried for adult (≥ 18 years) patients undergoing major resections for malignant neoplasia. Based on system-based complications considered relevant to the long-term treatment of GI disease, stratified differences in risk-adjusted incremental hospital costs and complication probabilities were compared. Differences in surgical outcomes and costs over time were also assessed.
Results: A total of 293,967 patients were included, weighted to represent 1,408,117 patients nationwide. One fourth (26.1%; 95% CI, 25.7-26.4%) experienced ≥ 1 pre-discharge complication (range, 45.3% esophagectomy to 24.0% rectal resection). Resultant annual risk-adjusted incremental hospital costs totaled $540 million nationwide (19.5% of the overall cost of care and an average of $20,900 per patient). Costs varied substantially with both cancer/resection type and complication group, ranging from $76.7 million for colectomies with infectious complications to $0.2 million for rectal resections with urinary complications. For each resection type, infectious ($154.7 million), GI ($85.5 million), and pulmonary ($77.9 million) complications were among the most significant drivers of increased hospital cost.
Conclusions: Quantifying and comparing the impact of complications on an indication-specific level in more complex patients offers an important step toward allowing providers/payers to meaningfully prioritize the design of novel and adaptation of existing value-maximization approaches

Comments

This work was published before the author joined Aga Khan University

Citation Information
Cheryl K Zogg, Taylor D Ottesen, Kareem J Kebaish, Anoop Galivanche, et al.. "The cost of complications following major resection of malignant neoplasia" Journal of gastrointestinal surgery Vol. 22 Iss. 11 (2018) p. 1976 - 1986
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/adil_haider/305/