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Published in: Neurosurgical Review 1/2023

01-12-2023 | Trigeminal Neuralgia | Research

Analyzing the cost-effectiveness of microvascular decompression and percutaneous radiofrequency rhizotomy for trigeminal neuralgia: the role of clinical classification

Authors: Peter Adidharma, Mustaqim Prasetya, Aji Wahyu Wardhana, Takuro Inoue, Adi Sulistyanto, Fadhil, Selfy Oswari, Ryan Rhiveldi Keswani, Muhammad Kusdiansah, Yunus Kuntawi Aji, Randy Ramadhan, Abrar Arham

Published in: Neurosurgical Review | Issue 1/2023

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Abstract

Trigeminal neuralgia (TN) is a neuropathic pain that can be treated with microvascular decompression (MVD) or percutaneous radiofrequency rhizotomy (PRR) when medications fail. However, the cost-effectiveness of these interventions is uncertain, and it is unclear whether TN should be considered as a single entity for cost-effectiveness analysis. To address these issues, a prospective cohort study was conducted between 2017 and 2020, documenting Burchiel et al.’s clinical classification, pain-free survival, complications, and costs. Two models of quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) were calculated: pain-specific (PQALY) and pain-complication-specific (PCQALY), based on pain-free survival and complications data, followed by cost-effectiveness analysis. The study included 112 patients, of whom 70 underwent MVD and 42 underwent PRR. Our findings revealed that MVD was less cost-effective in the PCQALY model than PRR, but more cost-effective in the PQALY model and had an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) that met the World Health Organization cost-effectiveness threshold in both models. Further clinical classification analysis showed that MVD was only cost-effective in type 1 TN patients, with an ICER of 0.9 and 1.3 times the GDP/capita, based on PQALY and PCQALY, respectively, meeting the cost-effectiveness criteria. Conversely, MVD was economically dominated by PRR for type 2 TN patients based on PQALY. These findings indicate that PRR may be more cost-effective for type 2 TN patients, while MVD remains the cost-effective option for type 1 TN patients. Our study highlights the importance of clinical classification and complication in determining the cost-effectiveness of MVD and PRR for refractory TN.
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Metadata
Title
Analyzing the cost-effectiveness of microvascular decompression and percutaneous radiofrequency rhizotomy for trigeminal neuralgia: the role of clinical classification
Authors
Peter Adidharma
Mustaqim Prasetya
Aji Wahyu Wardhana
Takuro Inoue
Adi Sulistyanto
Fadhil
Selfy Oswari
Ryan Rhiveldi Keswani
Muhammad Kusdiansah
Yunus Kuntawi Aji
Randy Ramadhan
Abrar Arham
Publication date
01-12-2023
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
Neurosurgical Review / Issue 1/2023
Print ISSN: 0344-5607
Electronic ISSN: 1437-2320
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10143-023-02047-8

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