1. Cost-utility of lung transplantation: a pilot study.
- Author
-
Gartner SH, Sevick MA, Keenan RJ, and Chen GJ
- Subjects
- Adult, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Costs and Cost Analysis, Cross-Sectional Studies, Fees, Medical, Female, Humans, Interviews as Topic, Male, Middle Aged, Pennsylvania, Pilot Projects, Quality of Life, Telephone, Lung Transplantation economics
- Abstract
Background: The purpose of this study was to conduct a pilot investigation of the cost-utility of lung transplantation. With this study we provide a threshold analysis to estimate the survival gains that must be achieved for lung transplantation to be considered a beneficial use of society's resources., Methods: A cross-sectional cohort design was used. All patients having undergone lung transplantation at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center between March 1 and August 31, 1994, were identified via roster of transplant recipients (n = 20). Surviving patients were interviewed, by telephone, at their 1-year anniversary date. Utility was assessed by use of the quality of well-being scale. Direct cost of care was estimated from adjusted charges for the surgical admission, plus physician fees per the Medicare Physician Fee Schedule., Results: The mean quality of well-being score for this group was 0.54 +/- 0.198 SD (median = 0.599, range 0 to 0.728). Summing the physician cost and the adjusted charges for the inpatient operative admission, the average cost of lung transplantation was $153,921 +/- $133,981 SD (median $94,324, range $63,405 to $598,482). At a cost of $94,324 and a utility of 0.599, the survival gain from surgery must be 2.7 years for the cost of the procedure to be justified from a societal perspective., Conclusions: Because of the many limitations in this pilot study, no firm policy implication may be drawn from these data. Directions for future research are discussed.
- Published
- 1997