Abstract
IntroductionThe primary aim was to assess and compare the total costs (direct health care costs and indirect costs due to loss of production) after early mobilization versus plaster immobilization in patients with a simple elbow dislocation. It was hypothesized that early mobilization would not lead to higher direct and indirect costs.Materials and methodsThis study used data of a multicenter randomized clinical trial (FuncSiE trial). From August 25, 2009 until September 18, 2012, 100 adult patients with a simple elbow dislocation were recruited and randomized to early mobilization (immediate motion exercises; n = 48) or 3 weeks plaster immobilization (n = 52). Patients completed questionnaires on health-related quality of life [EuroQoL-5D (EQ-5D) and Short Form-36 (SF-36 PCS and SF-36 MCS)], health care use, and work absence. Follow-up was 1 year. Primary outcome were the total costs at 1 year. Analysis was by intention to treat.ResultsThere were no significant differences in EQ-5D, SF-36 PCS, and SF-36 MCS between the two groups. Mean total costs per patient were €3624 in the early mobilization group versus €7072 in the plaster group (p = 0.094). Shorter work absenteeism in the early mobilization group (10 versus 18 days; p = 0.027) did not lead to significantly lower costs for loss of productivity (€1719 in the early mobilization group versus €4589; p = 0.120).ConclusionFrom a clinical and a socio-economic point of view, early mobilization should be the treatment of choice for a simple elbow dislocation. Plaster immobilization has inferior results at almost double the cost.
Highlights
The primary aim was to assess and compare the total costs after early mobilization versus plaster immobilization in patients with a simple elbow dislocation
The results of this study showed that early mobilization resulted in earlier recovery of elbow function and work resumption [12]
Apart from a relative predominance of patients with an affected dominant side in the early mobilization group, randomization resulted in similar baseline and injury characteristics in the two groups (Table 2)
Summary
The primary aim was to assess and compare the total costs (direct health care costs and indirect costs due to loss of production) after early mobilization versus plaster immobilization in patients with a simple elbow dislocation. The FuncSiE trial compared clinical outcome of early mobilization and plaster immobilization in patients with a simple elbow dislocation. The results of this study showed that early mobilization resulted in earlier recovery of elbow function and work resumption [12] These results justify the design of a treatment guideline advocating early mobilization from a clinical point of view. We performed a cost analysis of the FuncSiE randomized controlled trial to assess the direct and indirect costs and the cost-effectiveness of early mobilization versus plaster immobilization in patients with a simple elbow dislocation. It was hypothesized that early mobilization would not lead to higher costs
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