Cost-Effectiveness: How Do MIS & Open Spine Surgeries Compare?

Spine

Providers today are focused on delivering high quality, low cost healthcare. In spine surgery, the debate over whether minimally invasive or open surgical techniques are more cost-effective depends on whether you're examining the initial episode of care or long-term costs, and how you evaluate the economic impact of returning patients to normal activity.

Brian Grossman"Some minimally invasive techniques require significant initial expenditures for imaging technologies such as the O-arm, robotics, endoscopic equipment, etc.," says Brian S. Grossman, MD, of Southern California Orthopedic Institute in Van Nuys. "A hospital may need to generate a fair volume of cases to justify the initial costs for these technologies. Other minimally invasive techniques can be performed at very little additional expense to the hospital. If patients are able to be discharged from the hospital sooner following MIS, there may actually be cost savings in that regard."

 

The literature shows reductions in the length of stay after minimally invasive techniques when compared with open procedures. Patients also return to work more quickly, limiting their productivity and economic loss, and a lower risk of infections and complications after minimally invasive techniques brings the cost down further.

 

"I think you need to do a thorough cost analysis and outcomes analysis to really figure out true cost effectiveness," says Zachary A. Smith, MD, of Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago. "Cost analyses show minimallyZachary Smith invasive procedures cost about the same as open. The major advantage from the economic perspective is that patients return to work sooner and have less of a need for narcotics."

 

The Spine Journal published an article in November 2013 analyzing the perioperative costs associated with single-level minimally invasive and open transforaminal lumbar interbody fusion. The research showed hospital payments were higher for the open TLIF group than the minimally invasive group, each including 33 patients. Additional findings include:

 

•    Average surgical time was shorter for MIS (115.8 minutes) than open TLIF (186 minutes)
•    Length of stay was shorter for MIS (2.3 days) than open TLIF (2.9 days)
•    Anesthesia time and EBL time was lower in the MIS group
•    VAS scores decreased for both groups, but were significantly lower for the MIS group
•    MIS had lower direct hospital costs ($19,512) than the open group ($23,550)
•    Implant costs were similar in both groups, but accounted for two-thirds of direct costs in the MIS group ($13,764) and half in the open group ($13,778)

 

Dr. Alex Vaccarro"When hospitals use pricing structures that recognize all posterior spinal anchors as equal, they do not charge more for the set-up, access instruments or insertion devices necessary to place percutaneous instrumentation," says Alexander Vaccaro, MD, of Rothman Institute in Philadelphia. "In this setting, surgery may be more cost effective if one is experienced than if procedures are done in an open fashion, as one would avoid the required time for opening the wound and performing an open dissection."

 

The opportunity to perform these procedures in the ambulatory surgery center also presents cost-savings, as ASCs are reimbursed at a lower rate than hospitals and hospital outpatient departments.

 

"The MIS approach in ASCs helps otherwise healthy patients receive spine surgery outside of the hospital and minimizes their exposure to sicker patients," says Richard Kube, MD, Founder of Prairie Spine & Pain Institute inRichard Kube Peoria, Ill. "I think insurers are starting to wake up to the concept that this is safe to do in the ASC and will welcome the cost savings."

 

Medicare currently does not reimburse for spine surgery in the ASC setting, but some commercial payers in various regions of the country have been willing to contract with ASCs for spinal procedures.

 

Paul Jeffords"In the long term, [minimally invasive spine surgery] may cost less as long as the complication and revision rates are low," says Paul Jeffords, MD, of Resurgens Orthopaedics based in Atlanta. "If the patients are able to leave the hospital quicker, use less pain medication and return to work quicker, overall healthcare costs and the costs on society are reduced."

 

More Articles on Spine Surgery:
Dealing With Declining Reimbursements: Strategies From Spine Surgeons
25 Spine Surgeon Leaders in State Medical Societies
Innovation in Spine MIS, Biologics & More: Can Anything Stem the Flow?

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