Abstract

Autologous nerve grafting is the time-honored reconstruction method for peripheral nerve gaps. However, it is associated with donor-site morbidities. A growing number of studies have demonstrated the effective use of decellularized nerve allograft and synthetic conduits, which are convenient options with no donor deficit. The specific aim of this study was to characterize changes in practice trends for peripheral nerve defect reconstruction. The authors queried the 2015 to 2020 Merative MarketScan Databases for patients who underwent nerve autograft, allograft, synthetic conduit, and/or vein graft reconstruction. Patient demographic data (ie, location, indication) and hospital characteristics (ie, facility, provider type) were recorded. Regression analysis identified changes in trends over the study period. A total of 4331 patients underwent one or more nerve gap reconstructive procedures over the study period. Since the introduction of allograft CPT code in 2018, segmented mixed effect longitudinal modeling revealed that allograft utilization significantly increased from 21.5% to 29.6% after 2018 ( P < 0.001), whereas nerve autograft use decreased from 18.6% to 15.8% and conduit use decreased from 60% to 54.7% ( P = 0.09 and P = 0.03, respectively). When stratifying autograft by size, use of autograft less than or equal to 4 cm significantly decreased from 10.6% to 7.7% after 2018 ( P = 0.03), and autograft greater than 4 cm did not. When stratifying by state, there is heterogeneity in utilization rates of each product. After creation of a designated allograft CPT code in 2018, there was an increase in allograft use with concomitant decrease in conduit and short length autograft use, suggesting that allograft replaced a portion of procedures used in short nerve gap reconstruction.

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