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Cost-Effectiveness of Global Endometrial Ablation vs. Hysterectomy for Treatment of Abnormal Uterine Bleeding: US Commercial and Medicaid Payer Perspectives.

Abstract
Cost-effectiveness modeling studies of global endometrial ablation (GEA) for treatment of abnormal uterine bleeding (AUB) from a US perspective are lacking. The objective of this study was to model the cost-effectiveness of GEA vs. hysterectomy for treatment of AUB in the United States from both commercial and Medicaid payer perspectives. The study team developed a 1-, 3-, and 5-year semi-Markov decision-analytic model to simulate 2 hypothetical patient cohorts of women with AUB-1 treated with GEA and the other with hysterectomy. Clinical and economic data (including treatment patterns, health care resource utilization, direct costs, and productivity costs) came from analyses of commercial and Medicaid claims databases. Analysis results show that cost savings with simultaneous reduction in treatment complications and fewer days lost from work are achieved with GEA versus hysterectomy over almost all time horizons and under both the commercial payer and Medicaid perspectives. Cost-effectiveness metrics also favor GEA over hysterectomy from both the commercial payer and Medicaid payer perspectives-evidence strongly supporting the clinical-economic value about GEA versus hysterectomy. Results will interest clinicians, health care payers, and self-insured employers striving for cost-effective AUB treatments.
AuthorsJeffrey D Miller, Gregory M Lenhart, Machaon M Bonafede, Andrea S Lukes, Shannon K Laughlin-Tommaso
JournalPopulation health management (Popul Health Manag) Vol. 18 Issue 5 Pg. 373-82 (Oct 2015) ISSN: 1942-7905 [Electronic] United States
PMID25714906 (Publication Type: Comparative Study, Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't)
Topics
  • Cost-Benefit Analysis
  • Decision Trees
  • Direct Service Costs
  • Endometrial Ablation Techniques (economics)
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Hysterectomy (economics)
  • Insurance, Health
  • Medicaid
  • United States
  • Uterine Hemorrhage (economics, surgery)

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