Cost of Treating Sagittal Synostosis in the First Year of Life

Background Endoscopically assisted suturectomy (EAS) has been reported to reduce the morbidity and cost of treating sagittal synostosis when compared with traditional open cranial vault remodeling (CVR) procedures. Whereas the former claim is well substantiated and intuitive, the latter has not been validated by rigorous cost analysis. Methods Patient medical records and financial database reports were culled retrospectively to determine the total cost associated with both EAS and CVR during 1 year of care. Recorded cost data included physician and hospital services, orthotic equipment and fittings, and indirect patient cost. Results Ten patients treated with CVR were compared with 10 patients who underwent EAS. The CVR patients incurred greater costs in nearly all categories studied, including overall 1-year costs, physician services, hospital services, supplies/equipment, medications/intravenous fluids, and laboratory and blood bank services. Postoperative costs were greater in the EAS group, primarily because of the cost associated with orthotic services and indirect patient costs for travel and lost work. However, overall indirect patient costs for the whole year did not differ between the groups. One-year median costs were $55,121 for CVR and $23,377 for EAS. Early clinical results were similar for the 2 groups. Conclusions Cranial vault remodeling was more costly in the first year of treatment than EAS, although indirect patient costs were similar. The favorable cost of EAS compared with CVR provides further justification to consider this procedure as first-line treatment of sagittal synostosis in young infants.

[1]  J. Fearon,et al.  Single Sutural Craniosynostoses: Surgical Outcomes and Long-Term Growth , 2009, Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery.

[2]  J. Persing,et al.  MOC-PS(SM) CME article: management considerations in the treatment of craniosynostosis. , 2008, Plastic and reconstructive surgery.

[3]  Julia Seifert,et al.  Incidence and economic burden of injuries in the United States , 2007, Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health.

[4]  D. Jimenez,et al.  Endoscopy-assisted wide-vertex craniectomy, barrel stave osteotomies, and postoperative helmet molding therapy in the management of sagittal suture craniosynostosis. , 2004, Journal of neurosurgery.

[5]  J. Fearon Rigid Fixation of the Calvaria in Craniosynostosis without Using “Rigid” Fixation , 2003, Plastic and reconstructive surgery.

[6]  D. Jimenez,et al.  Early management of craniosynostosis using endoscopic-assisted strip craniectomies and cranial orthotic molding therapy. , 2002, Pediatrics.

[7]  Peter Nakaji,et al.  Immediate Cranial Vault Reconstruction With Bioresorbable Plates Following Endoscopically Assisted Sagittal Synostectomy , 2002, The Journal of craniofacial surgery.

[8]  L. Kumaranayake,et al.  The real and the nominal? Making inflationary adjustments to cost and other economic data. , 2000, Health policy and planning.

[9]  D. Jimenez,et al.  Endoscopic craniectomy for early correction of craniosynostosis. , 1999, Plastic and reconstructive surgery.

[10]  D. Jimenez,et al.  Endoscopic craniectomy for early surgical correction of sagittal craniosynostosis. , 1998, Journal of neurosurgery.