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Journal Article

Citation

Miller LE, Anderson LH. Cureus 2019; 11(8): e5337.

Affiliation

Health Economics, Technomics Research, Minneapolis, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Curēus)

DOI

10.7759/cureus.5337

PMID

31602347

PMCID

PMC6779225

Abstract

PURPOSE  The objective of this study was to determine the independent association of ambulatory ability with complications and medical costs in patients with spinal cord injury (SCI).

METHODS Patients with SCI between T1-T12 enrolled in the National Spinal Cord Injury Database (NSCID) provided a minimum one-year follow-up. Covariate-adjusted annual rates of important medical complications (pressure sore, urinary tract infection, hospitalization) and associated medical costs were determined over five years post-injury.  Results A total of 1,753 patients provided data at one-year follow-up and 1,340 patients provided five-year data. At one-year post-injury, 82% of patients were non-ambulatory and 18% were ambulatory. After adjusting for important covariates, ambulatory status was associated with a lower annual probability of urinary tract infection (43% vs. 68%), pressure sore (12% vs. 35%), and hospitalization (23% vs. 34%). Covariate-adjusted base-case medical costs due to urinary tract infection, pressure sore, and hospitalization were 34% lower in ambulatory vs. non-ambulatory patients ($31,358 vs. $47,266) over five years. Probabilistic sensitivity analyses confirmed the base-case results.

CONCLUSION In spinal cord-injured individuals, the ability to ambulate is independently associated with lower complication risks and associated medical costs over the five-year period following injury. Long-term clinical benefit and cost savings may be realized with assisted or unassisted ambulation in spinal cord-injured patients.

Copyright © 2019, Miller et al.


Language: en

Keywords

ambulation; function; hospitalization; paraplegia; pressure sore; sci; urinary tract infection

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