Litcius/Paper detail

Comparison of utilization and cost of healthcare services and pharmacotherapy following implantation of vagus nerve stimulation <i>vs.</i> responsive neurostimulation or deep brain stimulation for the treatment of drug-resistant epilepsy: analyses of a large United States healthcare claims database

Tom Vincent, Qian Li, Lu Zhang, Michael E. Stokes, Vanessa Danielson, Joanna Murphy, Francesca Barion, Sandi Lam, Reginald Lassagne, Ariel Berger

2022Journal of Medical Economics12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

AIM: Vagus nerve stimulation (VNS), responsive neurostimulation (RNS), and deep brain stimulation (DBS) all are options for drug-resistant epilepsy (DRE). However, little is known about how the choice of neurostimulation impacts subsequent healthcare costs. MATERIALS AND METHODS: RNS/DBS). VNS patients were matched by propensity scoring to RNS/DBS patients. Use and cost of healthcare resources and pharmacotherapy were ascertained over the 24-month period following neurostimulation, incorporating all-cause and epilepsy-related measures. Disease-related care was defined based on diagnoses of claims for medical care and relevant pharmacotherapies. RESULTS: Seven hundred and ninety-two patients met all selection criteria. VNS patients were younger, were prescribed a higher pre-index mean number of anti-seizure medications (ASMs), and had higher pre-index levels of use and cost of epilepsy-related healthcare services. We propensity matched 148 VNS patients to an equal number of RNS/DBS patients. One year following index date (inclusive), mean total all-cause healthcare costs were 50% lower among VNS patients than RNS/DBS patients, and mean epilepsy-related costs were 55% lower; corresponding decreases at the two-year mark were 41% and 48%, respectively. LIMITATIONS: Some clinical variables, such as seizure frequency and severity, quality of life, and functional status were unavailable in the database, precluding our ability to comprehensively assess differences between devices. Administrative claims data are subject to billing code errors, inaccuracies, and missing data, resulting in possible misclassification and/or unmeasured confounding. CONCLUSIONS: After matching, VNS was associated with significantly lower all-cause and epilepsy-related costs for the two-year period following implantation. All-cause and epilepsy-related costs remained statistically significantly lower for VNS even after costs of implantation were excluded.

Topics & Concepts

Vagus nerve stimulationNeurostimulationMedicineEpilepsyDrug Resistant EpilepsyHealth careEpilepsy surgeryDeep brain stimulationPharmacotherapyQuality of life (healthcare)Emergency medicineAnesthesiaDiseaseStimulationInternal medicineVagus nervePsychiatryParkinson's diseaseNursingEconomicsEconomic growthVagus Nerve Stimulation ResearchNeurological disorders and treatmentsMultiple Sclerosis Research Studies