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Randomized Controlled Trial
. 2022 Nov 1;5(11):e2243609.
doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.43609.

Cost-effectiveness of Intermittent vs Continuous Pulse Oximetry Monitoring in Infants Hospitalized With Stabilized Bronchiolitis

Collaborators, Affiliations
Randomized Controlled Trial

Cost-effectiveness of Intermittent vs Continuous Pulse Oximetry Monitoring in Infants Hospitalized With Stabilized Bronchiolitis

Myla E Moretti et al. JAMA Netw Open. .

Abstract

Importance: Pulse oximetry is a noninvasive technology that is integral to the supportive care of hospitalized infants with bronchiolitis. A multicenter, randomized trial comparing the effectiveness of intermittent vs continuous pulse oximetry found similar length of hospital stay and safety outcomes, and greater nursing satisfaction, with intermittent monitoring.

Objectives: To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of intermittent vs continuous pulse oximetry in hospitalized infants with stabilized bronchiolitis.

Design, setting, and participants: An economic evaluation concurrent with a randomized trial in community and tertiary children's hospitals in Ontario, Canada, was conducted using a probabilistic analysis. Patients were enrolled from November 1, 2016, to May 31, 2019. Data included infants aged 4 weeks to 24 months hospitalized with bronchiolitis, with or without supplemental oxygen, after stabilization. The cost-effectiveness analysis adopted a societal and health care system perspective and a time horizon from hospitalization to 15 days post-discharge. Patient level direct health care costs and indirect costs were included. Health resource use, costs, and clinical outcomes were obtained from trial data. Publicly available pricing resources were used to supplement costs. Ranges for sensitivity analysis were based on 95% confidence intervals of the trial data. All costs were reported in 2021 Canadian dollars.

Interventions: Intermittent (every 4 hours) vs continuous pulse oximetry using an oxygen saturation target of 90% or higher.

Main outcomes and measures: Costs and incremental costs.

Results: Trial data from 229 infants (median [IQR] age, 4.0 [2.2-8.5] months; 136 boys [59.4%], 93 girls [40.6%]) were included. Mean societal costs per patient were $6879 (95% CI, $3393 to $12 317) in the intermittent and $7428 (95% CI, $1743 to $25 011) in the continuous group with a mean incremental cost of -$548 (95% CI, -$18 486 to $8105). Mean health care system costs per patient were $4195 (95% CI, $1191 to $9461) in the intermittent and $4716 (95% CI, $335 to $22 093) in the continuous group (incremental cost, -$520; 95% CI, -$18 286 to $7358). The mean effect measure of length of stay was similar between the 2 groups: 37.4 hours (95% CI, 1.0 to 137.7 hours) in the intermittent group and 38.5 hours (95% CI, 0 to 237.1 hours) in the continuous group. One-way sensitivity analyses on all variables revealed that the findings were robust and the incremental costs were not sensitive to the uncertainty within the defined ranges.

Conclusions and relevance: In this prospective economic evaluation study, we found that costs were similar for intermittent and continuous pulse oximetry considering societal and health care perspectives. Given that clinical outcomes between monitoring strategies are comparable and that other practice considerations favor intermittent monitoring, these findings provide additional information that support the use of intermittent monitoring in hospitalized infants with stabilized bronchiolitis.

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Conflict of interest statement

Conflict of Interest Disclosures: Dr Moretti reported receiving salary support in part by the Canadian Institute for Health Research during the conduct of the study. Dr Mahant reported receiving grants from Canadian Institutes of Health Research and Physician Services Incorporated Foundation; he reported receiving personal fees from Journal of Hospital Medicine outside the submitted work. No other disclosures were reported.

Figures

Figure.
Figure.. Incremental Cost vs Incremental Effectiveness Scatterplot Showing 10 000 Iterations of Probabilistic Analysis
Each iteration of the probabilistic analysis is displayed as a scatter plot of incremental costs in dollars and incremental effects in length of stay in hours. The model iterations are heavily concentrated around the center of the graph, indicating that no strategy was obviously more expensive or more effective.

Comment in

References

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