Bilateral Deep Brain Stimulation is the Procedure to Beat for Advanced Parkinson Disease: A Meta-Analytic, Cost-Effective Threshold Analysis for Focused Ultrasound.
Authors: Mahajan UV, Ravikumar VK, Kumar KK, Ku S, Ojukwu DI, Kilbane C, Ghanouni P, Rosenow JM, Stein SC, Halpern CH
Parkinson disease (PD) impairs daily functioning for an increasing number of patients and has a growing national economic burden. Deep brain stimulation (DBS) may be the most broadly accepted procedural intervention for PD, but cost-effectiveness has not been established. Moreover, magnetic resonance image-guided focused ultrasound (FUS) is an emerging incisionless, ablative treatment that could potentially be safer and even more cost-effective. To (1) quantify the utility (functional disability metric) imparted by DBS and radiofrequency ablation (RF), (2) compare cost-effectiveness of DBS and RF, and (3) establish a preliminary success threshold at which FUS would be cost-effective compared to these procedures. We performed a meta-analysis of articles (1998-2018) of DBS and RF targeting the globus pallidus or subthalamic nucleus in PD patients and calculated utility using pooled Unified Parkinson Disease Rating Scale motor (UPDRS-3) scores and adverse events incidences. We calculated Medicare reimbursements for each treatment as a proxy for societal cost. Over a 22-mo mean follow-up period, bilateral DBS imparted the most utility (0.423 quality-adjusted life-years added) compared to (in order of best to worst) bilateral RF, unilateral DBS, and unilateral RF, and was the most cost-effective (expected cost: $32 095 ± $594) over a 22-mo mean follow-up. Based on this benchmark, FUS would need to impart UPDRS-3 reductions of ∼16% and ∼33% to be the most cost-effective treatment over 2- and 5-yr periods, respectively. Bilateral DBS imparts the most utility and cost-effectiveness for PD. If our established success threshold is met, FUS ablation could dominate bilateral DBS's cost-effectiveness from a societal cost perspective.
Introduction
Purpose
Thermal ablation
Study Objective
To quantify the utility of deep brain stimulation and radiofrequency ablation, compare their cost-effectiveness for Parkinson disease, and determine the efficacy threshold at which focused ultrasound would be cost-effective relative to these procedures.
Animal model / Human subject
Homo sapiens (human patients with Parkinson disease); strain: N/A; age: not reported; sex: not reported
Disease model
Parkinson disease
Outcomes and Safety
Summary of Outcomes
Bilateral deep brain stimulation (DBS) produced the greatest benefit (0.423 QALYs added over a 22-month mean follow-up) and was the most cost-effective (expected cost $32,095 ± $594), with treatment ranking bilateral DBS > bilateral radiofrequency (RF) ablation > unilateral DBS > unilateral RF. Focused ultrasound was not directly tested for parameters; the paper estimated FUS would need to achieve UPDRS-3 reductions of ~16% over 2 years and ~33% over 5 years to be more cost-effective than bilateral DBS.
Duration of biological effect
22 months
Safety-related matter
The meta-analysis stated that adverse-event incidences for DBS and RF were calculated, but the provided text does not report any specific adverse effects or other safety outcomes.
Brain Region
Ultrasound Parameters
Focal Characteristics
Focal depth: None; Focal length: None; Aperture size: None
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