Abstract
IntroductionBundled payments for spine surgery, which is known for having high overall cost with wide variation, have been previously studied in older adults. However, there has been limited work examining bundled payments in working-age patients. We sought to identify the variation in the cost of spine surgery among working age adults in a large, national insurance claims database.MethodsWe queried the TRICARE claims database for all patients, aged 18–64, undergoing cervical and non-cervical spinal fusion surgery between 2012 and 2014. We calculated the case mix adjusted, price standardized payments for all aspects of care during the 60-, 90-, and 180-day periods post operation. Variation was assessed by stratifying Hospital Referral Regions into quintiles.ResultsAfter adjusting for case mix, there was significant variation in the cost of both cervical ($10,538.23, 60% of first quintile) and non-cervical ($20,155.59, 74%). Relative variation in total cost decreased from 60- to 180-days (63 to 55% and 76 to 69%). Index hospitalization was the primary driver of costs and variation for both cervical (1st-to-5th quintile range: $11,033–$19,960) and non-cervical ($18,565–$36,844) followed by readmissions for cervical ($0–$11,521) and non-cervical ($0–$13,932). Even at the highest quintile, post-acute care remained the lowest contribution to overall cost ($2070 & $2984).ConclusionsThere is wide variation in the cost of spine surgery across the United States for working age adults, driven largely by index procedure and readmissions costs. Our findings suggest that implementing episodes longer than the current 90-day standard would do little to better control cost variation.
Highlights
Bundled payments for spine surgery, which is known for having high overall cost with wide variation, have been previously studied in older adults
We evaluated variation in costs for spinal fusion surgery among working age adults to show the potential impact of implementing bundled payments in this population and identify drivers of variation in the cost of spine surgery
These procedures were performed for TRICARE beneficiaries in 168 Hospital Referral Regions (HRR) during the study period and were included in this analysis
Summary
Bundled payments for spine surgery, which is known for having high overall cost with wide variation, have been previously studied in older adults. Recent work by Wynn-Jones, et al, examined the potential impact of a bundled payment model on the cost of common surgical procedures among a working age adult population (age 18–64) including spinal surgery [15]. They found significant variation in overall costs and that spending patterns in the different phases of care for working age adults (including index hospitalization, readmissions, post-acute care, and physician fees) diverged from those observed in the older adult Medicare population
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