Long and Complex Superficial Femoral Artery (SFA) Lesion Treatments in France: An Analysis of the French Nationwide Claims Database
Speaker(s)
Tournier C1, Gouëffic Y2, Leboucher C1, Chatellier G2, de Léotoing L3
1Putnam PHMR, Paris, 75, France, 2Groupe Hospitalier Paris St Joseph, Paris, France, 3W.L. Gore & Associates, Paris, 75, France
Presentation Documents
OBJECTIVES: Lower-limb peripheral arterial disease (LLPAD) is associated with high rates of mortality and amputation. The main objective of this study was to compare patients treated for long and complex femoro-popliteal lesions in France with either dedicated vascular endoprosthesis or open surgery.
METHODS: This retrospective population-based study used the French national medico-administrative data available for almost the entire population of hospitalized patients. Diagnoses and procedures were coded using ICD-10 and the French CCAM classification. Patients with LLPAD hospitalized between January 2018 and December 2022 were identified from a combination of diagnosis, endoprosthesis type and procedure codes and allocated to 2 groups: dedicated vascular endoprosthesis (group 1) and open surgery (group 2). To ensure between-group comparability, we conducted a case-control study (1:3) using a propensity score to match with demographic and clinical characteristics of the index hospital stay (such as age, gender, disease severity, Charlson score). Endpoints were post-operative in-hospital mortality, amputation rate and direct costs (National Health Insurance [NHI] perspective) during the index stay.
RESULTS: After matching, the study comprised 2,246 (age 72.3 ± 12.0, male: 70.9%) and 6,738 patients (age 71.6 ± 11.3, male: 75.5%) in group 1 and 2, respectively. The proportion of patients with severe disease was similar in both groups. All-cause hospital mortality was 1.4% in group 1 versus 3.4% in group 2 (OR: 0.39, [95%CI: 0.27-0.58]). In-hospital amputation occurred in 6.6% versus 8.3% of patients in group 1 and 2 (OR: 0.78, [95%CI: 0.64-0.94]), respectively. The associated costs were €6,954 (IQR: €5,569–€9,587) in group 1 and €8,575 (IQR: €6,577–€12,957) in group 2 (non-significant difference).
CONCLUSIONS: In this real-world nationwide cohort of PAD patients, those treated with dedicated vascular endoprosthesis had a lower risk of both in-hospital mortality and major amputation than their matched counterparts treated with open surgery, at 19% lower costs.
Code
RWD163
Topic
Clinical Outcomes, Economic Evaluation, Medical Technologies, Real World Data & Information Systems
Topic Subcategory
Comparative Effectiveness or Efficacy, Cost-comparison, Effectiveness, Utility, Benefit Analysis, Health & Insurance Records Systems, Medical Devices
Disease
Cardiovascular Disorders (including MI, Stroke, Circulatory), Medical Devices