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The clinical implications and cost-effectiveness of the provision of medical in addition to surgical catheter insertion for peritoneal dialysis in people with kidney failure

Hill, Harry; Rawdin, Andrew; Wailoo, Allan; Briggs, Victoria; Lambie, Mark; McCullough, Keith; Dunn, Louese; Davies, Simon; Wilkie, Martin; Fotheringham, James

Authors

Harry Hill

Andrew Rawdin

Allan Wailoo

Victoria Briggs

Keith McCullough

Louese Dunn

Martin Wilkie

James Fotheringham



Abstract

Background High-quality and timely peritoneal access is essential for effective peritoneal dialysis (PD). Existing comparisons of medical compared to surgical catheter insertion have focused on the incidence of catheter events, but the cost-effectiveness of providing medical in addition to surgical catheter insertion in a dual pathway, compared to providing surgical insertion alone has not been evaluated. Methods Data from the UK Catheter study, exploring how patient, service and insertion technique factors interact was used to estimate the comparative rates of catheter events between medical and surgical catheter insertion. A cost-effectiveness model estimates the health benefits and costs of providing medical in addition to surgical catheter insertion, compared to surgical insertion alone. Parametric modelling estimated time to catheter events, haemodialysis and transplantation to populate the model. Results Data on 769 first catheter insertions informs the model (325 medical and 444 surgical). Fewer catheter events were observed with medical insertion. The dual insertion pathway (69% medical, 31% surgical) was therefore associated with lower lifetime catheter events (3.18 vs. 3.34) and longer time on PD (3.07 vs. 3.00 years) than a purely surgical insertion pathway. The lifetime mean differences in quality-adjusted life years (7.12 vs. 7.00) and near identical costs (£226,549 vs. £226,764) meant dual insertion pathway was likely to be cost-effective, a finding robust to a series of sensitivity analyses. Conclusion Offering medical in addition to surgical catheter insertion techniques has the potential to improve clinical outcomes and is likely to be highly cost-effective compared to surgical insertion alone.

Citation

Hill, H., Rawdin, A., Wailoo, A., Briggs, V., Lambie, M., McCullough, K., Dunn, L., Davies, S., Wilkie, M., & Fotheringham, J. (in press). The clinical implications and cost-effectiveness of the provision of medical in addition to surgical catheter insertion for peritoneal dialysis in people with kidney failure. Peritoneal Dialysis International: Journal of the International Society for Peritoneal Dialysis, https://doi.org/10.1177/08968608251314976

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Feb 4, 2025
Online Publication Date Feb 4, 2025
Deposit Date Feb 21, 2025
Journal Peritoneal Dialysis International: Journal of the International Society for Peritoneal Dialysis
Print ISSN 0896-8608
Publisher SAGE Publications
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
DOI https://doi.org/10.1177/08968608251314976
Public URL https://keele-repository.worktribe.com/output/1076533