Title: Comparative Effectiveness in Orthopaedics: Stakeholder Perspectives
1Comparative Effectiveness in Orthopaedics
Stakeholder Perspectives
- Kevin J. Bozic, MD, MBA
- Associate Professor and Vice Chair
- UCSF Department of Orthopaedic Surgery and Philip
R. Lee Institute for Health Policy Studies
2Disclosures/Conflicts of Interest
- External Advisory Role
- AAOS (HCSC, GTOC)
- AAHKS (Education, Health Policy, EBPC)
- COA (Executive Committee)
- CMS (MedCAC)
- UCSF Medical Center (HTAP)
- United Health Care, BCBSA, Integrated Healthcare
Association, Pacific Business Group on Health - Research Support
- OREF, AHRQ, NIH
3 Objectives
- To identify considerations in the decision making
process for the adoption of new technologies in
orthopaedics - To understand the strengths and limitations of
comparative effectiveness research - To develop an algorithm for evaluating and
adopting new technologies in an orthopaedic
practice
4Technology in Orthopaedics
5What Factors Influence Patient Outcomes?
Surgeon Factors
Patient Factors
Hospital Factors
Implant Factors
6Benefits of Technology
7Technology Unintended consequences
8Technology Cost Implications
- The general consensus among health economists
is that growth in real health care spending over
the past 4 decades was principally the result of
the emergence of new medical technologies and
their adoption and widespread diffusion by the
U.S. health care system. - -CBO Report, Technological Change and the Growth
of Health Care Spending, Feb, 2008
- however, the benefit of many of these new
technologies has not yet been rigorously
demonstrated.
9Comparative Effectiveness Value
Value?
Cost
??
1.5-2X
2-3X
??
4-6X
??
10Evaluating Technologies Perspective
- Surgeons
- Evidence standard
- Adequacy of evidence
- Magnitude of benefit
- Relationships with industry
- Peers
- Hospitals/payers
- Short-term cost-containment
- Patients
- Internet, friends, family
- DTCA
- Policymakers
- Comparative Effectiveness
11Clinician Perspective
- Level of Evidence (I-V)
- Efficacy
- The extent to which medical interventions achieve
health improvements under ideal circumstances - Effectiveness
- The extent to which medical interventions achieve
health improvements in real practice settings
12Effectiveness Registry Data
13Effectiveness Registry Data
14Hospital Perspective
1990s
2000s
15UCSF Healthcare Technology Assessment Program
(HTAP)
- HTA is the bridge between the world of research
and the world of clinical decision making - Alan Garber, Health Affairs, 2004
- Considerations
- Patient population
- Surgeon experience
- Relationships with vendor, hospital
- Price
- Service
- Programmatic needs
16Patient Perspective DTCA
17DTCA Policy Implications
DTCA
18Policy Maker Perspective Comparative
Effectiveness?
19Comparative Effectiveness Research
- As applied in the health care sector, an
analysis of comparative effectiveness is simply a
rigorous evaluation of the impact of different
options that are available for treating a given
medical condition for a particular set of
patients. - Congressional Budget Office, 2007
- See http//www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/88xx/doc8891/12-18
-ComparativeEffectiveness.pdf
20Evolutionary or Revolutionary?
21Trends in Orthopaedic Implant Costs in the U.S.
22Overshooting the Needs of our Patients
- The functionality of todays healthcare
technologies, although impressive, often
outstrips the ability of consumers to absorb it
23Impact of Technology on Surgeon Value
- Take hip replacement surgery for example. Here
much of the cost and skill, as it were, have
moved from the surgeon to the device.
24Considerations in Technology Decisions
- Is there a clinical need?
- Patient population
- Results with existing technology
- Use data whenever possible
- Factors influencing decision
- Device company
- Peers
- Hospital
- Patients
- Impact on
- Patient outcomes
- Hospital margins
- O.R. Efficiency
25My Algorithm
- Versatility of product line
- Service
- Price
- Benefits vs. Risks of switching
Price
Impact on efficiency
Potential improvement in clinical outcomes
Uncertainty in patient outcomes
26Summary
- Explosion of new technologies in orthopaedics
- Consumerism
- Increased scrutiny, transparency regarding costs,
clinical effectiveness - Questions
- Comparative effectiveness
- Clinical effectiveness vs. gold-standard?
- Cost-effectiveness?
- Impact on clinical, shared decision making
27Newer Is Not Always Better
- Novelty cannot necessarily be equated with
benefit, and an intervention or devices value
resides not in its newness but rather in its
ability to improve patient outcomes, reduce
morbidity, and/or reduce the overall cost of
care. - Emanuel EJ, Fuchs VR, Garber AM. Essential
elements of a technology and outcomes assessment
initiative. JAMA. Sep 19 2007298(11)1323-1325.
28Thank You!!!