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Cost savings of using a cemented total hip replacement
34
Citations
27
References
2012
Year
Cost SavingsSurgeryHealth Care FinanceOrthopaedic SurgeryOrthopaedicsJoint ReplacementSurgical OutcomesPublic HealthPrimary ThrHealth Services ResearchHealth PolicyOutcomes ResearchReplacement ProcedurePreoperative CareCost EffectivenessEconomic EvaluationHealthcare ValueHip ArthroplastyHealth EconomicsHealth Care ReimbursementPatient SafetyHealth Care CostRevision SurgeryMedicineRoutine Primary Thr
The debate whether to use cemented or uncemented components in primary total hip replacement (THR) has not yet been considered with reference to the cost implications to the National Health Service. We obtained the number of cemented and uncemented components implanted in 2009 from the National Joint Registry for England and Wales. The cost of each component was established. The initial financial saving if all were cemented was then calculated. Subsequently the five-year rates of revision for each type of component were reviewed and the predicted number of revisions at five years for the actual components used was compared with the predicted number of revisions for a cemented THR. This was then multiplied by the mean cost of revision surgery to provide an indication of the savings over the first five years if all primary THRs were cemented. The saving at primary THR was calculated to be £10 million with an additional saving during the first five years of between £5 million and £8.5 million. The use of cemented components in routine primary THR in the NHS as a whole can be justified on a financial level but we recognise individual patient factors must be considered when deciding which components to use.
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