Abstract

Meta-analytic techniques support neuroablation as a promising therapy for treatment-refractory obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). This technique appears to offer a more favorable complication rate and higher utility than deep brain stimulation. Moreover, these pooled findings suggest that bilateral radiofrequency (RF) capsulotomy has marginally greater efficacy than stereotactic radiosurgery or cingulotomy. MR-guided focused ultrasound (MRgFUS) capsulotomy is an emerging approach with a potentially more favorable profile than RF ablation and radiosurgery, with preliminary data suggesting safety and efficacy. As a clinical trial is being developed, our study examined the cost and clinical parameters necessary for MRgFUS capsulotomy to be a more cost-effective alternative to RF capsulotomy. A decision analytical model of MRgFUS with RF capsulotomy for OCD was performed using outcome parameters of percent surgical improvement in Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale (Y-BOCS) score, complications, and side effects. The analysis compared measured societal costs, derived from Medicare reimbursement rates, and effectiveness, based on published RF data. Effectiveness was defined as the degree to which MRgFUS lowered Y-BOCS score. Given that MRgFUS is a new therapy for OCD with scant published data, theoretical risks of MRgFUS capsulotomy were derived from published essential tremor outcomes. Sensitivity analysis yielded cost, effectiveness, and complication rates as critical MRgFUS parameters defining the cost-effectiveness threshold. Literature search identified eight publications (162 subjects). The average reduction of preoperative Y-BOCS score was 56.6% after RF capsulotomy with a 22.6% improvement in utility, a measure of quality of life. Complications occurred in 16.2% of RF cases. In 1.42% of cases, complications were considered acute-perioperative and incurred additional hospitalization cost. The adverse events, including neurological and neurobehavioral changes, in the other 14.8% of cases did not incur further costs, although they impacted utility. Rollback analysis of RF capsulotomy yielded an expected effectiveness of 0.212 quality-adjusted life years/year at an average cost of $24,099. Compared to RF capsulotomy, MRgFUS was more cost-effective under a range of possible cost and complication rates. While further study will be required, MRgFUS lacks many of the inherent risks associated with more invasive modalities and has potential as a safe and cost-effective treatment for OCD.

Highlights

  • Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is a debilitating psychiatric disease that significantly impacts an individual’s social and occupational functioning

  • as neuroablation (ABL) techniques conventionally consist of capsulotomy or cingulotomy using either radiofrequency (RF) ablation or stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) (Brown et al, 2016)

  • Obsessive-compulsive disorder is a chronic and often disabling condition affecting millions of people, and neurosurgical interventions help many who do not benefit from other treatments

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Summary

Introduction

Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is a debilitating psychiatric disease that significantly impacts an individual’s social and occupational functioning. While cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), exposure and response prevention (ERP), and pharmacological interventions are the mainstay of therapy for patients with OCD, approximately 40–60% of patients fail to respond to their first trial of therapy (Kreienberg et al, 2013) For those patients with severe treatment-refractory OCD, neurosurgical interventions such as neuroablation (ABL) or deep brain stimulation (DBS) remain therapeutic options (Bari et al, 2018). Our group recently completed a meta-analysis of published data that revealed that ABL was more effective than DBS for OCD (Kumar et al, 2019) This analysis identified non-significant trends indicating that capsulotomy was superior to cingulotomy and that RF ablation had greater efficacy than SRS. Our recent findings are of particular interest in the context of the emerging therapeutic modality for treatment of OCD: thermal lesioning using MR-guided focused ultrasound (MRgFUS)

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