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Usefulness of a short-term register for health technology assessment where the evidence base is poor

Usefulness of a short-term register for health technology assessment where the evidence base is poor
Usefulness of a short-term register for health technology assessment where the evidence base is poor
Objectives: This study reviews the coverage and usefulness of a short-term register, established specifically for health technology assessment of a novel interventional procedure (minimally invasive repair of pectus excavatum, or the Nuss procedure).

Methods: Coverage of the register during 2004–07 was assessed by comparison with Hospital Episodes Statistics (HES) for England. Its usefulness was assessed by comparing safety and efficacy data with the published literature and by feedback from committee members who in 2009 were involved in reviewing NICE's original guidance from 2003.

Results: The register reported 260 cases from thirteen UK hospitals during nearly 9 years. During a coverage evaluation period of 3 years, there were 152 registered Nuss procedures. An additional 246 repairs of pectus excavatum were undertaken in twenty-six previously unidentified hospitals. Of the 246, 23 were Nuss procedures (from two hospitals), 140 were open procedures (from eleven hospitals), and 3 were coding errors. No details were available for eighty cases undertaken at ten hospitals. The quantity of published literature had increased substantially since publication of original guidance in 2003. It related mostly to technical and safety outcomes, whereas the register included patient reported outcomes. The literature and the register reported similar rates of major adverse events such as bar displacement (2–10 percent). Committee members considered that the Register made a useful contribution to guidance development.

Conclusions: This study shows that a register set up to support a health technology assessment process can produce useful data both about safety and about patient-reported outcomes. Coverage may be improved by active follow-up based on routine hospital statistics. Improvement in coding for new procedures is needed in the United Kingdom.
0266-4623
95-101
Patrick, Hannah
14f5ccbd-bf6f-4cd1-aac4-f59a2f159dd6
Gallaugher, Sally
e44b1da0-a3ff-4ab7-9184-4cf3cab217c3
Czoski-murray, Carolyn
9291da81-86cc-4d3f-bff9-98c488f54c75
Wheeler, Robert
81d94930-d9d7-486f-8db1-b9e57ed04a8d
Chattle, Marc
ffc2433f-e8f3-4c9c-9a08-d1f9042e6b97
Marlow, Mirella
ed2f67a4-ef6c-4dab-b42c-6673a99682ee
Lyratzopoulos, Georgios
f7dcc428-8ba2-45bf-9efd-157614af079f
Campbell, Bruce
b9f32c60-a184-4789-b378-ec6ff0f763ab
Patrick, Hannah
14f5ccbd-bf6f-4cd1-aac4-f59a2f159dd6
Gallaugher, Sally
e44b1da0-a3ff-4ab7-9184-4cf3cab217c3
Czoski-murray, Carolyn
9291da81-86cc-4d3f-bff9-98c488f54c75
Wheeler, Robert
81d94930-d9d7-486f-8db1-b9e57ed04a8d
Chattle, Marc
ffc2433f-e8f3-4c9c-9a08-d1f9042e6b97
Marlow, Mirella
ed2f67a4-ef6c-4dab-b42c-6673a99682ee
Lyratzopoulos, Georgios
f7dcc428-8ba2-45bf-9efd-157614af079f
Campbell, Bruce
b9f32c60-a184-4789-b378-ec6ff0f763ab

Patrick, Hannah, Gallaugher, Sally, Czoski-murray, Carolyn, Wheeler, Robert, Chattle, Marc, Marlow, Mirella, Lyratzopoulos, Georgios and Campbell, Bruce (2010) Usefulness of a short-term register for health technology assessment where the evidence base is poor. International Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care, 26 (1), 95-101. (doi:10.1017/S0266462309990602).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objectives: This study reviews the coverage and usefulness of a short-term register, established specifically for health technology assessment of a novel interventional procedure (minimally invasive repair of pectus excavatum, or the Nuss procedure).

Methods: Coverage of the register during 2004–07 was assessed by comparison with Hospital Episodes Statistics (HES) for England. Its usefulness was assessed by comparing safety and efficacy data with the published literature and by feedback from committee members who in 2009 were involved in reviewing NICE's original guidance from 2003.

Results: The register reported 260 cases from thirteen UK hospitals during nearly 9 years. During a coverage evaluation period of 3 years, there were 152 registered Nuss procedures. An additional 246 repairs of pectus excavatum were undertaken in twenty-six previously unidentified hospitals. Of the 246, 23 were Nuss procedures (from two hospitals), 140 were open procedures (from eleven hospitals), and 3 were coding errors. No details were available for eighty cases undertaken at ten hospitals. The quantity of published literature had increased substantially since publication of original guidance in 2003. It related mostly to technical and safety outcomes, whereas the register included patient reported outcomes. The literature and the register reported similar rates of major adverse events such as bar displacement (2–10 percent). Committee members considered that the Register made a useful contribution to guidance development.

Conclusions: This study shows that a register set up to support a health technology assessment process can produce useful data both about safety and about patient-reported outcomes. Coverage may be improved by active follow-up based on routine hospital statistics. Improvement in coding for new procedures is needed in the United Kingdom.

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Published date: 8 January 2010

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Local EPrints ID: 480161
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/480161
ISSN: 0266-4623
PURE UUID: f158d888-bb7c-4f78-a512-1d438e969840

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Date deposited: 01 Aug 2023 16:55
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 01:04

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Contributors

Author: Hannah Patrick
Author: Sally Gallaugher
Author: Carolyn Czoski-murray
Author: Robert Wheeler
Author: Marc Chattle
Author: Mirella Marlow
Author: Georgios Lyratzopoulos
Author: Bruce Campbell

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