BMJ Open (Jul 2023)

Advocating uniformity in spine surgery: a practical disease-specific guideline for trial-based economic evaluations

  • ,
  • Lei Si,
  • Francesca Fiorentino,
  • Mickael Hiligsmann,
  • Bart Depreitere,
  • Kevin Ong,
  • Silvia Evers,
  • Carmen Dirksen,
  • Sem M M Hermans,
  • Henk van Santbrink,
  • Wouter L W van Hemert,
  • Ruud Droeghaag,
  • Valérie N E Schuermans,
  • Anouk Y J M Smeets,
  • Inge J M H Caelers,
  • Sukhvinder Kalsi-Ryan,
  • Anne Broekema,
  • Axel Svedbom,
  • Carmen Selva Sevilla,
  • Daniel Cher,
  • Henkvan Santbrink,
  • Jordana Schmier,
  • Jos Kuijlen,
  • Laura De La Torre Perrez,
  • Marieke Krol,
  • Takahito Fujimori,
  • Wouter van Hemert,
  • Elske Vanden Akker–Van Marle

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2023-073535
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 7

Abstract

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Objectives Despite the availability of general and national guidelines for the conduct and reporting of economic evaluations, there is heterogeneity in economic evolutions concerning spine surgery. This is partly the result of differing levels of adherence to the existing guidelines and the lack of disease-specific recommendations for economic evaluations. The extensive heterogeneity in study design, follow-up duration and outcome measurements limit the comparability of economic evaluations in spine surgery. This study has three objectives: (1) to create disease-specific recommendations for the design and conduct of trial-based economic evaluations in spine surgery, (2) to define recommendations for reporting economic evaluations in spine surgery as a complement to the Consolidated Health Economic Evaluation Reporting Standards (CHEERS) 2022 checklist and (3) to discuss methodological challenges and defining the need for future research.Design A modified Delphi method according to the RAND/UCLA Appropriateness Method.Setting A four-step process was followed to create and validate disease-specific statements and recommendations for the conduct and reporting of trial-based economic evaluations in spine surgery. Consensus was defined as >75% agreement.Participants A total of 20 experts were included in the expert group. Validation of the final recommendations was obtained in a Delphi panel, which consisted of 40 researchers in the field who were not included in the expert group.Primary and secondary outcome measures The primary outcome measure is a set of recommendations for the conduct and reporting, as a complement to the CHEERS 2022 checklist, of economic evaluations in spine surgery.Results A total of 31 recommendations are made. The Delphi panel confirmed consensus on all of the recommendations in the proposed guideline.Conclusion This study provides an accessible and practical guideline for the conduct of trial-based economic evaluations in spine surgery. This disease-specific guideline is a complement to existing guidelines, and should aid in reaching uniformity and comparability.