Combining Brain Diagnosis and Therapy in a Single Strategy: The Safety, Reliability, and Cost Implications Using Same-Day versus Separate-Day Stereotactic Procedures
- Authors
- Park, Kyung-Jae; Niranjan, Ajay; Kondziolka, Douglas; Kano, Hideyuki; Castillo, Paul; Matchett, Jarred C.; Flickinger, John C.; Lunsford, L. Dade
- Issue Date
- 2011
- Publisher
- KARGER
- Keywords
- Cost; Radiosurgery; Single-stage procedure; Stereotactic biopsy
- Citation
- STEREOTACTIC AND FUNCTIONAL NEUROSURGERY, v.89, no.6, pp 346 - 356
- Pages
- 11
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- STEREOTACTIC AND FUNCTIONAL NEUROSURGERY
- Volume
- 89
- Number
- 6
- Start Page
- 346
- End Page
- 356
- URI
- https://scholarworks.korea.ac.kr/kumedicine/handle/2020.sw.kumedicine/14164
- DOI
- 10.1159/000332057
- ISSN
- 1011-6125
1423-0372
- Abstract
- Background: A therapeutic radiosurgery procedure usually follows a separate diagnostic stereotactic procedure after days or weeks. Objectives: To define the clinical reliability, safety, and cost implications of same-day diagnostic stereotactic biopsy and therapeutic radiosurgery. Methods: During an 8-year interval, 26 patients underwent stereotactic brain biopsy followed by immediate therapeutic stereotactic radiosurgery in a single-day combined procedure. The intraoperative diagnosis was determined using standard histopathological techniques. Diagnostic accuracy, hospital costs, and contribution margins associated with this treatment strategy were compared to those of 26 case-matched patients (controls) who underwent a stereotactic diagnostic procedure followed by a separate-day outpatient SRS procedure within 6 weeks during the same time interval. Results: The intraoperative diagnosis correlated with the final histopathological diagnosis in 96% of the patients. Biopsy-related morbidity did not occur in this series. The mean total costs of same-day patients was significantly lower than the costs of patients who had two-stage procedures (USD 9,077 +/- 2,366 vs. 11,284 +/- 3,025; p = 0.008). The net contribution to the hospital margin of USD 13,736 was not significantly different between the two management strategies. Conclusions: The advantages of the same-day approach included a single stereotactic head frame application, reduced total admission time, consecutive histopathological diagnosis and therapy in a single hospital admission, and reduced total hospital costs. For patients who are highly suspected to have a brain tumor for which SRS is likely to be an effective therapeutic strategy, same-day diagnostic stereotactic biopsy followed by therapeutic SRS proved to be a safe, reliable, and cost-effective management strategy. Copyright (C) 2011 S. Karger AG, Basel
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- Appears in
Collections - 2. Clinical Science > Department of Neurosurgery > 1. Journal Articles
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