Resource utilization and economic costs of care based on a randomized trial of vacuum-assisted closure therapy in the treatment of diabetic foot wounds.
(2008) In The American Journal of Surgery 195. p.782-788- Abstract
- BACKGROUND: To evaluate resource utilization and direct economic costs of care for patients treated with negative-pressure wound therapy (NPWT), using the Vacuum-Assisted Closure (V.A.C.) system, compared to standard moist wound therapy (MWT). METHODS: A total of 162 diabetic patients with post-amputation wounds (up to the trans-metatarsal level) entered a 16-week, randomized clinical trial. Patients randomized to V.A.C. (n = 77) received therapy with dressing changes every 48 hours. Control patients (n = 85) received standard MWT. Resource utilization, procedures, and direct costs were calculated and analyzed in this post hoc retrospective study. RESULTS: There was no difference between groups for in-patient hospital stay (number of... (More)
- BACKGROUND: To evaluate resource utilization and direct economic costs of care for patients treated with negative-pressure wound therapy (NPWT), using the Vacuum-Assisted Closure (V.A.C.) system, compared to standard moist wound therapy (MWT). METHODS: A total of 162 diabetic patients with post-amputation wounds (up to the trans-metatarsal level) entered a 16-week, randomized clinical trial. Patients randomized to V.A.C. (n = 77) received therapy with dressing changes every 48 hours. Control patients (n = 85) received standard MWT. Resource utilization, procedures, and direct costs were calculated and analyzed in this post hoc retrospective study. RESULTS: There was no difference between groups for in-patient hospital stay (number of admissions or length of stay). More surgical procedures (including debridement) were required in the MWT group (120 vs 43 NPWT, P <.001). The average number of dressing changes performed per patient was 118.0 (range 12-226) for MWT versus 41 (6-140) for NPWT (P = .0001). The MWT group had 11 (range 0-106) outpatient treatment visits during the study versus 4 (range 0-47) in the NPWT group (P <.05). The average direct cost per patient treated for 8 weeks or longer (independent of clinical outcome) was $27,270 and $36,096 in the NPWT and MWT groups, respectively. The average total cost to achieve healing was $25,954 for patients treated with NPWT (n = 43) compared with $38,806 for the MWT group (n = 33). CONCLUSION: Treatment of diabetic patients with post amputation wounds using NPWT resulted in lower resource utilization and a greater proportion of patients obtaining wound healing at a lower overall cost of care when compared to MWT. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/1052274
- author
- Apelqvist, Jan LU ; Armstrong, David G ; Lavery, Lawrence A and Boulton, Andrew J M
- organization
- publishing date
- 2008
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- in
- The American Journal of Surgery
- volume
- 195
- pages
- 782 - 788
- publisher
- Elsevier
- external identifiers
-
- pmid:18355797
- wos:000256585700010
- scopus:44349193355
- pmid:18355797
- ISSN
- 1879-1883
- DOI
- 10.1016/j.amjsurg.2007.06.023
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- eb14c9e8-06a2-4600-bbb4-898e3287f172 (old id 1052274)
- alternative location
- http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18355797?dopt=Abstract
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-04 08:57:02
- date last changed
- 2024-05-11 04:11:12
@article{eb14c9e8-06a2-4600-bbb4-898e3287f172, abstract = {{BACKGROUND: To evaluate resource utilization and direct economic costs of care for patients treated with negative-pressure wound therapy (NPWT), using the Vacuum-Assisted Closure (V.A.C.) system, compared to standard moist wound therapy (MWT). METHODS: A total of 162 diabetic patients with post-amputation wounds (up to the trans-metatarsal level) entered a 16-week, randomized clinical trial. Patients randomized to V.A.C. (n = 77) received therapy with dressing changes every 48 hours. Control patients (n = 85) received standard MWT. Resource utilization, procedures, and direct costs were calculated and analyzed in this post hoc retrospective study. RESULTS: There was no difference between groups for in-patient hospital stay (number of admissions or length of stay). More surgical procedures (including debridement) were required in the MWT group (120 vs 43 NPWT, P <.001). The average number of dressing changes performed per patient was 118.0 (range 12-226) for MWT versus 41 (6-140) for NPWT (P = .0001). The MWT group had 11 (range 0-106) outpatient treatment visits during the study versus 4 (range 0-47) in the NPWT group (P <.05). The average direct cost per patient treated for 8 weeks or longer (independent of clinical outcome) was $27,270 and $36,096 in the NPWT and MWT groups, respectively. The average total cost to achieve healing was $25,954 for patients treated with NPWT (n = 43) compared with $38,806 for the MWT group (n = 33). CONCLUSION: Treatment of diabetic patients with post amputation wounds using NPWT resulted in lower resource utilization and a greater proportion of patients obtaining wound healing at a lower overall cost of care when compared to MWT.}}, author = {{Apelqvist, Jan and Armstrong, David G and Lavery, Lawrence A and Boulton, Andrew J M}}, issn = {{1879-1883}}, language = {{eng}}, pages = {{782--788}}, publisher = {{Elsevier}}, series = {{The American Journal of Surgery}}, title = {{Resource utilization and economic costs of care based on a randomized trial of vacuum-assisted closure therapy in the treatment of diabetic foot wounds.}}, url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.amjsurg.2007.06.023}}, doi = {{10.1016/j.amjsurg.2007.06.023}}, volume = {{195}}, year = {{2008}}, }