PLoS ONE (Jan 2020)

Reduced 2-year aneurysm retreatment and costs among patients treated with flow diversion versus non-flow diversion embolization: A Premier Healthcare Database retrospective cohort study.

  • Ramesh Grandhi,
  • Michael Karsy,
  • Philipp Taussky,
  • Christine Nichols Ricker,
  • Ajay Malhotra

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0234478
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 6
p. e0234478

Abstract

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IntroductionThe use of endovascular treatments, including Pipeline embolization devices (PEDs) and coiling approaches (non-PEDs), has played an increasingly important role in the treatment of intracranial aneurysms. Despite multiple studies evaluating PEDs, a real-world evaluation of follow-up outcomes and costs remains to be completed.MethodsThe Premier Healthcare Database (PHD), 2010-2017, was queried to identify patients with unruptured intracranial aneurysms treated endovascularly. Rates of readmission, retreatment, and cost at the same hospital were compared between patients who underwent PED and non-PED endovascular treatments of their aneurysms. One-to-three (PED-to-non-PED) propensity score (PS) matching was performed to adjust for potential case selection bias into the PED cohort, with covariates including age group, sex, Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI) group, payor, region, and randomized hospital identifier.ResultsA total of 679 patients underwent PED placement and 8432 had non-PED treatments. Prior to PS matching, there were significant but minor differences in age (56.7±12.8 vs. 58.2±12.6 years, p = 0.004) and sex (male 16.6% vs. 24.4%, pConclusionsThese results suggest that PEDs may potentially reduce downstream retreatment rates and costs. Further work is required to improve identification of patient subgroups that could benefit from PED over non-PED treatments both initially and during follow-up.