1. Post robotic investment: Cost consequences and impact on length of stay for obese women with endometrial cancer
- Author
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Pernille Tine Jensen, Siv L. Joergensen, Malene Korsholm, Sören Möller, Dorte Gyrd-Hansen, and Ole Mogensen
- Subjects
Adult ,resource consumption ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Denmark ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Population ,Postoperative Complications ,Robotic Surgical Procedures ,length of stay ,robotic-assisted laparoscopic hysterectomy ,Internal medicine ,Laparotomy ,medicine ,Humans ,Investment cost ,Obesity ,costs of care ,education ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Endometrial cancer ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,General Medicine ,Length of Stay ,Middle Aged ,obese women ,medicine.disease ,Confidence interval ,Endometrial Neoplasms ,endometrial cancer ,Costs and Cost Analysis ,Resource use ,Female ,Laparoscopy ,long follow-up ,business ,Body mass index ,Cohort study - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The aim of the study was to investigate whether robotic-assisted surgery is associated with lower incremental resource use amongst obese patients relative to non-obese patients after a Danish nationwide adoption of robotic-assisted surgery in women with early-stage endometrial cancer. This is a population-based cohort study based on registers and clinical data.MATERIAL AND METHODS: All women who underwent surgery (robotic, laparoscopic, and laparotomy) from 2008 to 2015 were included and divided according to body mass index (RESULTS: In total, 3934 women were included. The adoption of robotic-assisted surgery did not demonstrate statistically significant implications for total costs among obese women (€3417; 95% confidence interval [CI] -€854 to €7688, P = .117). Further, for obese women, a statistically significant reduction in bed days related to the index hospitalization was demonstrated (-1.9 bed days; CI -3.6 to -0.2, P = .025). For non-obese women, the adoption of robotic-assisted surgery was, however, associated with statistically significant total costs increments of €9333 (95% CI €3729 to €14936, P = .001) and no reduction in bed days related to the index hospitalization was observed (+0.9 bed days; 95% CI -0.6 to 2.3, P = .242).CONCLUSIONS: The national investment in robotic-assisted surgery for endometrial cancer seems to have more modest cost implications post-surgery for obese women. This may be partly driven by a significant reduction in bed days related to the index hospitalization among obese women, as well as reductions in subsequent hospitalizations.
- Published
- 2021
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