학술논문

Cost and utilization analysis of concurrent versus staged testicular prosthesis implantation for radical orchiectomy.
Document Type
Article
Source
PLoS ONE. 1/8/2024, Vol. 19 Issue 1, p1-9. 9p.
Subject
*CASTRATION
*COST analysis
*PROSTHETICS
*AGE differences
*OLDER men
*DATABASES
Language
ISSN
1932-6203
Abstract
Purpose: American Urological Association guidelines recommend testicular prosthesis discussion prior to orchiectomy. Utilization may be low. We compared outcomes and care utilization between concurrent implant (CI) and staged implant (SI) insertion after radical orchiectomy. Materials & methods: The MarketScan Commercial claims database (2008–2017) was queried for men ages >18 years who underwent radical orchiectomy for testicular mass, stratified as orchiectomy with no implant, CI, or SI. 90-day outcomes included rate of reoperation, readmission, emergency department (ED) presentation, and outpatient visits. Regression models provided rate ratio comparison. Results: 8803 patients (8564 no implant, 190 CI, 49 SI; 2.7% implant rate) were identified with no difference in age, Charlson Comorbidity Index, insurance plan, additional cancer treatment, or metastasis. Median perioperative cost at orchiectomy (+/- implant) for no implant, CI, and SI were $5682 (3648–8554), $7823 (5403–10973), and $5380 (4130–10521), respectively (p<0.001). Median perioperative cost for SI at implantation was $8180 (4920–14591) for a total cost (orchiectomy + implant) of $13650 (5380 + 8180). CI patients were more likely to have follow-up (p = 0.006) with more visits (p = 0.030) compared to the SI group post-implantation but had similar follow-up (p = 0.065) and less visits (p = 0.025) compared to the SI patients' post-orchiectomy period. Overall explant rates were 4.7% for CI and 14.3% for SI (p = 0.04) with a median time to explant of 166 (IQR: 135–210) and 40 days (IQR: 9.5–141.5; p = 0.06). Median cost of removal was $2060 (IQR: 967–2880). Conclusions: CI placement has less total perioperative cost, lower explant rate, and similar postoperative utilization to SI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]