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A MODEL-BASED COST-EFFECTIVENESS ANALYSIS OF STRATIFIED CARE VERSUS USUAL CARE FOR LOW BACK PAIN

The Society for Back Pain Research (SBPR) Annual General Meeting 2019, ‘From Bench to Bedside’. Sheffield, England, 5–6 September 2019.



Abstract

Background and Purpose

The STarT Back approach comprises subgrouping of LBP patients according to risk of persistent LBP-related disability, and matches patients to appropriate treatments. In a clinical trial and implementation study, this stratified care approach was clinically and cost-effective compared to usual non-stratified care. However, the long-term cost- effectiveness is unknown, and could be established with decision modelling. A systematic review of model-based economic evaluations in LBP found shortcomings with existing models, including inadequate characterisation of the condition in health states and absence of long-term modelling. This study conceptualises the first decision model of this stratified care approach for LBP management, and assesses long-term cost-effectiveness.

Methods

A cost-utility analysis from the NHS perspective compared stratified care with usual care, in patients consulting in primary care with non-specific LBP. A Markov state-transition model was constructed where long-term patient prognosis over ten years was dependent upon physical function achieved at twelve months. Consultation with experts helped define condition health states, inform the long-term modelling, and choice of sensitivity analyses.

Results

Preliminary base-case results indicate this model of stratified care is cost-effective over a ten-year time horizon, delivering 0.10 additional quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) at a cost-saving of £100.27 per patient. Sensitivity analyses indicate the approach is likely to be cost-effective in all scenarios, and cost-saving in most, although sensitive to assumptions regarding long-term patient prognosis. Analysis from the societal perspective improved the associated cost-savings.

Conclusion

It is likely that implementation of this stratified care model will help reduce unnecessary healthcare usage, whilst improving patient quality of life.

No conflicts of interest

Funding: Research stipend for JAH by the Institute for Primary Care & Health Sciences, Keele University.


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