The technique and cost of radiosurgery for the treatment of 1-3 brain metastases

Can J Neurol Sci. 2013 Nov;40(6):795-9. doi: 10.1017/s0317167100015912.

Abstract

Background: Radiosurgery can be delivered through a variety of modalities including robotic and fixed gantry Linac-based systems. They appear equally effective and safe. Thus, community need and costs remain the main determinants for choosing a given modality. We performed an economic evaluation to identify settings in which one modality could be preferred over the other.

Methods: Using local estimates of resource volumes and unit prices, we computed the incremental cost/patient of robotic radiosurgery compared to fixed-gantry radiosurgery from a payer's perspective. By varying parameters of resource volumes, we performed a probabilistic analysis stratified by number of brain lesions. in addition, we performed sensitivity analyses to examine the effect of patient volume on cost/patient.

Results: The cost of robotic radiosurgery was $4,783/patient, and cost of fixed-gantry radiosurgery was $5,166/patient. The mean incremental cost was $-383 (95% interval: $-670, $110) for all lesions, $78 ($23, $123) for solitary lesions, and $-610 ($-679, $-534) for multiple lesions. The cost/patient of robotic radiosurgery varied from $5,656 (low volume setting) to $4,492 (high volume setting).

Conclusion: in settings of moderate to high volume (6-10 hours of daily operation), and in multiple lesions, robotic radiosurgery is more cost effective than fixed-gantry radiosurgery.

Technique utilisée et coût de la radiochirurgie pour le traitement de 1 à 3 métastases cérébrales.

MeSH terms

  • Brain
  • Brain Neoplasms* / surgery
  • Cost-Benefit Analysis
  • Humans
  • Radiosurgery*
  • Treatment Outcome