Abstract

In contrast to clinical effectiveness of resective epilepsy surgery (RES) for patients with drug-resistant epilepsy, societal costs of RES is still unclear. The aim of this study was to report on total societal costs up until two years after surgery and analyse the trend of post-surgical costs over time. Secondary objectives included assessing quality of life (QoL) changes and identifying determinants of post-surgical costs.Data were derived from the patients' entire medical history based on hospital files and accompanied by validated questionnaires before and 3-, 6-, 12-, and 24-months post-surgery to additionally include medical consumption outside of the hospital, productivity losses and gains, and QoL. To explore the trend of post-surgical costs over time and identify determinants of post-surgical costs, linear mixed effects and linear regression models were performed.The study included 44 patients. Mean complete costs from diagnostics and treatment strategies in the period before referral for pre-surgical evaluation up until two years after RES were €121,856 (Interquartile range=€76,058-€137,027). Post-surgical costs significantly decreased 12 months (mean 3-month difference=€-6,675, p = 0.000) and 24 months (mean 3-month difference=€-7,690, p = 0.000) after surgery compared to 3 months before surgery. Higher post-surgical costs were associated with a clinically relevant increase in disease-specific QoL after RES (p = 0.000), previous ketogenic diet (p = 0.005), RES in the left hemisphere (p = 0.014), previous RES (p = 0.007), and higher diagnostics and treatment strategies costs before referral for pre-surgical evaluation (p = 0.021). For disease-specific and generic QoL, 20 (45%) patients reached a clinically relevant QoL increase two years after surgery compared to before RES.In conclusion, RES leads to significant reduction in costs 2 years post-surgery. History of RES and ketogenic diet, clinically relevant disease-specific QoL increase, surgery in the left hemisphere, and higher costs of diagnostics and treatment strategies before referral for pre-surgical evaluation were significant determinants for higher post-surgical costs after RES.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)364-376
Number of pages13
JournalJournal of Medical Economics
Volume28
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 28 Feb 2025

Keywords

  • H
  • H5
  • H51
  • I
  • I1
  • I10
  • I12
  • I18
  • cost-of-illness
  • drug-resistant epilepsy
  • economic impact
  • epilepsy
  • epilepsy surgery
  • quality of life
  • refractory epilepsy
  • resective epilepsy surgery
  • societal costs

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