Abstract

BackgroundThe in-hospital treatment of patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI) is considered to be expensive, especially in patients with severe TBI (s-TBI). To improve future treatment decision-making, resource allocation and research initiatives, this study reviewed the in-hospital costs for patients with s-TBI and the quality of study methodology.MethodsA systematic search was performed using the following databases: PubMed, MEDLINE, Embase, Web of Science, Cochrane library, CENTRAL, Emcare, PsychINFO, Academic Search Premier and Google Scholar. Articles published before August 2018 reporting in-hospital acute care costs for patients with s-TBI were included. Quality was assessed by using a 19-item checklist based on the CHEERS statement.ResultsTwenty-five out of 2372 articles were included. In-hospital costs per patient were generally high and ranged from $2,130 to $401,808. Variation between study results was primarily caused by methodological heterogeneity and variable patient and treatment characteristics. The quality assessment showed variable study quality with a mean total score of 71% (range 48% - 96%). Especially items concerning cost data scored poorly (49%) because data source, cost calculation methodology and outcome reporting were regularly unmentioned or inadequately reported.ConclusionsHealthcare consumption and in-hospital costs for patients with s-TBI were high and varied widely between studies. Costs were primarily driven by the length of stay and surgical intervention and increased with higher TBI severity. However, drawing firm conclusions on the actual in-hospital costs of patients sustaining s-TBI was complicated due to variation and inadequate quality of the included studies. Future economic evaluations should focus on the long-term cost-effectiveness of treatment strategies and use guideline recommendations and common data elements to improve study quality.

Highlights

  • Healthcare expenditures are rising worldwide and endanger the affordability of national healthcare systems. [1, 2] To secure their future existence, a thoughtful and righteous distribution of limited resources is essential

  • To improve future treatment decision-making, resource allocation and research initiatives, this study reviewed the in-hospital costs for patients with s-traumatic brain injury (TBI) and the quality of study methodology

  • Costs were primarily driven by the length of stay and surgical intervention and increased with higher TBI severity

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Summary

Introduction

Healthcare expenditures are rising worldwide and endanger the affordability of national healthcare systems. [1, 2] To secure their future existence, a thoughtful and righteous distribution of limited resources is essential. [16,17,18] Despite their substantial healthcare consumption, these vulnerable patients show high rates of mortality and unfavourable outcome For these patients with poor outcome at high costs, a critical appraisal of treatment costs-effectiveness is essential to avoid ineffective expenditures and improve treatment decision-making. Insight into in-hospital costs and important components of the costs, such as healthcare utilization and other factors that drive these costs were not provided This is important information for physicians and policymakers, because this information is needed for decision-making and for correct allocation of resources. To improve future treatment decision-making, resource allocation and research initiatives, this study reviewed the in-hospital costs for patients with s-TBI and the quality of study methodology

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