Keywords

nutritional support, pressure ulcer prevention, cost-effectiveness

 

Authors

  1. Tuffaha, Haitham W. PhD
  2. Roberts, Shelley PhD
  3. Chaboyer, Wendy PhD
  4. Gordon, Louisa G. PhD
  5. Scuffham, Paul A. PhD

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of nutritional support compared with standard care in preventing pressure ulcers (PrUs) in high-risk hospitalized patients.

 

DESIGN: An economic model using data from a systematic literature review. A meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials on the efficacy of nutritional support in reducing the incidence of PrUs was conducted.

 

PATIENTS: Modeled cohort of hospitalized patients at high risk of developing PrUs and malnutrition simulated during their hospital stay and up to 1 year.

 

INTERVENTIONS: Standard care included PrU prevention strategies, such as redistribution surfaces, repositioning, and skin protection strategies, along with standard hospital diet. In addition to the standard care, the intervention group received nutritional support comprising patient education, nutrition goal setting, and the consumption of high-protein supplements.

 

MAIN OUTCOMES MEASURES: The analysis was from a healthcare payer perspective. Key outcomes of the model included the average costs and quality-adjusted life years. Model results were tested in univariate sensitivity analyses, and decision uncertainty was characterized using a probabilistic sensitivity analysis.

 

MAIN RESULTS: Compared with standard care, nutritional support was cost saving at AU $425 per patient and marginally more effective with an average 0.005 quality-adjusted life years gained. The probability of nutritional support being cost-effective was 87%.

 

CONCLUSIONS: Nutritional support to prevent PrUs in high-risk hospitalized patients is cost-effective with substantial cost savings predicted. Hospitals should implement the recommendations from the current PrU practice guidelines and offer nutritional support to high-risk patients.