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PP151 Comparison Of Patients Undergoing New Technology For Prostate Cancer
- Deyvid Silva, Letícia Lazarini, Araujo Aline, Evelinda Trindade, Otavio Becker, Elizabeth Nishio
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- Journal:
- International Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care / Volume 34 / Issue S1 / 2018
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 03 January 2019, pp. 125-126
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Introduction:
Prostate neoplasia affects more than one million people worldwide. Surgical treatments have evolved from open or video prostatectomy, up to the High Intensity Focused Ultrasound (HIFU) technique. HIFU studies cite less costs and better quality of life during the first year of follow-up. The objective of this study is to describe a consecutive series of eligible patients, with Gleason score 6 and 7, and compare resources used along those three treatment techniques.
Methods:A comparative and retrospective study was conducted during the first 2017 semester, at Hospital de Transplantes de São Paulo, São Paulo city, Brazil. Consecutive eligible patients were matched by age, disease stage and profile and Gleason score 6 or 7. Resources used were assessed through medical records review and in- and out-patient visit interviews.
Results:A total of 152 patients were followed: 50 underwent open surgery prostatectomy, 50 underwent video prostatectomy and 52 underwent HIFU. Mean age did not differ between groups (66.6, 64.1 and 65.6 years, respectively). All patients were followed for at least three months. The average operating room time was 4.7, 4.1 and 2.3 hours, and the average anesthetic recovery time was 2.0, 1.9 and 2.0 hours, respectively. Average inpatient length of stay was 2.5, 2.7 and 1.5 days, respectively. Postoperatively, nine (18 percent) open surgery patients, and 14 (28 percent) video-prostatectomy patients required an average of one full day of intensive care, compared to only one (2 percent) HIFU patient. During follow-up, the same effectiveness was observed between the groups, none required re-intervention. Thus, considering the 50 percent economy in hours of operating room and of days of hospital stay, as well as 10 times less use of intensive care unit days when the HIFU technique was compared to conventional surgeries, it is estimated the HIFU program allowed 30 percent cost savings.
Conclusions:The HIFU program presented effectiveness and savings. The hospital can increase access to care for prostate neoplasia patients.
PD34 São Paulo Congenital Heart Corrections: Three-Years' Assist Registry
- Evelinda Trindade, Luiz Fernando Caneo, Aida Luiza Turquetto, Luciana Amato, Fabio Carmona, Ribeirão Preto, Walter Vincente, Santiago Raul Arrieta, Nana Miura, Paulo Henrique Manso, Beatriz Helena Furlanetto, Marcelo Jatene, Fabio Jatene, Joao Bruno Silveira, Marcella Ritchmann
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- Journal:
- International Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care / Volume 34 / Issue S1 / 2018
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 03 January 2019, pp. 141-142
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Introduction:
Death from congenital heart disease (CHD) can be avoided, contributing to reduced infant mortality. The objective of this study was to identify the profile of patients undergoing surgical correction for CHD in three São Paulo State hospitals, and to determine factors that contribute to morbidity and mortality.
Methods:The Voluntary Pediatric Cardiovascular Surgery Multicenter Registry (ASSIST) was created in 2014 through a Research Grant Program for the Public Healthcare System (Pesquisas para o Sistema Único de Saúde, PPSUS)* project, a federal-state joint strategic public policies research grant, coordinated by the Hospital das Clínicas of Faculdade de Medicina of Universidade de São Paulo (InCor-HCFMUSP-SP) and Ribeirão Preto's Hospital das Clínicas, both linked to the São Paulo University Medical School.
Results:We analyzed 1,842 patients, with an average age of 1.2 (range 0.4–8.6) years, 50.9 percent were male. Procedural complexity was classified as “Risk Adjustment in Congenital Heart Surgery” version 1 score, RACHS-1: 18.2 percent RACHS1, 25.5 percent RACHS2, 41.2 percent RACHS3, 9.6 percent RACHS4 and 5.4 percent RACHS5–6. Overall hospital mortality was 12.2 percent, and preoperative risk factors included: age <30 days (Odds Ratio, OR = 1.7 p = 0.012), prolonged ICU admission (OR = 3.3 p = 0.001). Other significant factors were RACHS score >4 (OR = 5.3 p < 0.001), heart dysfunction (OR = 3.4 p = 0.001), sepsis (OR = 3 p = 0.001), hemodynamic or surgical re-intervention required (OR = 6.2 p < 0.001), cardiorespiratory arrest (CPR, OR = 24.9 p < 0.001) and renal failure (OR = 5.4 p<0.001). The frequency of related morbidity was 16.2 heart failure, 7.1 percent arrythmia, 5.9 percent pneumonia, 5.9 percent pneumotórax, 4.2 percent pleural and pericardial effusion, 10 percent mechanical ventiation > 7 days, 13.2 percent late sternal closure, 2.8 percent had wound infection, 3.7 percent neurological alterations, 2.3 percent diaphragmatic dysfunction, 11.5 percent CPR, 3.2 percent renal failure, 4.5 percent sepsis, 55.1 percent length of hospital stay longer than 5 days with 45.8 percent postoperative hospital admission longer than 15 days and 6.1 percent needed surgical or hemodynamic re-intervention.
Conclusions:The information collected in the ASSIST registry was of great importance in the São Paulo State CHD surgical practice evaluation. Morbi-mortality related factors elicited critical points and allowed improvement actions. Excluding age and intrinsic procedure complexity, identified outcome modifier factors can be manageable, aiming to increase patient safety and program resolubility or performance.
PP125 Evidence-based Policy Making – Bottom-Up Heuristic Engagement Process
- Evelinda Trindade, Anna Maria Buehler, Clarice Petramale, Luiz Augusto Carneiro D'Albuquerque, David Uip, Lorena Pozzo
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- Journal:
- International Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care / Volume 33 / Issue S1 / 2017
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 12 January 2018, pp. 130-131
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INTRODUCTION:
Solid organ and hematopoietic cell transplantation are some of the more expensive procedures universally paid by the public Brazilian Unified Healthcare System (SUS). Transplanted patients depend on maintenance immunosuppression to prevent death or graft loss. A bottom-up heuristic process proposed new immunosuppression drugs for incorporation into the SUS.
METHODS:Systematic evidence synthesis and Brazilian transplantation registries base-cases, Kaplan-Myer survival and economic assessments were presented in specialized national congresses with open public Delphi sessions to build professional Clinical and Therapeutic Protocols (PCDT) by consensus. Five consensus transplantation PCDTs with a SUS perspective budget impact and sensitivity analysis were submitted to the Health Ministry SUS Technology Incorporation National Commission (CONITEC) plenary for a decision. PCDTs were publicized in CONITEC Internet and Diário Oficial da União, an, official periodic publication, as well as undergoing widespread dissemination through mailings for Public Consultation. Public contributions were added to PCDTs to support Health Ministry policy making.
RESULTS:The São Paulo State Health Secretariat coordinated the synthesis and economic assessments made by 115 experienced transplantation specialists and health technology evaluators over ten years. Heart, lung, liver, pancreas and hematopoietic cells transplantation PCDTs (with tacrolimus, sirolimus and everolimus alternative immunosuppression) can significantly prevent 27.8 percent, 28.1 percent, 7.2 percent, 11.1 percent and 4.3 percent graft loss or graft versus host disease and death, respectively, for refractory transplantees rescue during the first year post-transplantation, saving healthcare resources. Ten-year follow-up data demonstrated partial benefits were sustained. Analysis demonstrated +USD689,655.17, +USD501,567.40, -USD377,802.51, +USD221.289,42 and +USD50.734,08 budget impact, respectively, resulting in an overall USD1,085,443.55 for 2,146 transplantees. The 5 PCDTs were favorably voted by CONITEC plenary members, 155 public contributions were added by patients and stakeholders, and the Brazilian Health Ministry decided to adopt the SUS reimbursement listing.
CONCLUSIONS:Democratic participation gave PCDTs real-world basis adjustments, SUS innovation and improved compliance.
PP053 A Case Study: Collective Individual Basis For The Judiciary Debate
- Daniela Melo, Evelinda Trindade, Daniel Oliveira, Patricia Martins, Lúcia Ribeiro
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- Journal:
- International Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care / Volume 33 / Issue S1 / 2017
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 12 January 2018, pp. 96-97
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INTRODUCTION:
The volume of lawsuits for drugs has increased in Brazil. The scientific evidence basis consideration by the Brazilian judiciary system is being debated. In the State of São Paulo, the drug with the highest number of lawsuits is insulin glargine. Between January and August 2016, the São Paulo State Department of Health lost 264 insulin glargine lawsuits requiring supply for adult patients (>18 years old). Insulin glargine has already been submitted and unfavorably assessed by the Health Ministry SUS Technology Incorporation National Commission (CONITEC), so is not available in the Brazilian public system.
METHODS:Random analysis of 153 (58 percent) lawsuits were carried out on digital court records. Data collected from legal proceedings were: the type of diabetes (1, 2 or unspecified); age of the patient; origin of the order; specialty of the prescriber and the reason described for the request. Each record was structured with variables data within a matrix in Microsoft Excel© software. Analysis of frequencies, absolute and relative distribution of quantitative variables, as well as conceptual clusters in the qualitative textual analysis are presented.
RESULTS:The mean age of the 153 patients was 49±17 years. The majority of patients requested insulin glargine to achieve glycemic control (n = 116; 76 percent): because -“diabetes is uncontrolled and the analogous insulin is essential to get it” (n = 106; 69 percent); or -“patient claims to have obtained glycemic control with insulin glargine but there are none of the mandatory laboratory tests results in lawsuits” (n = 7; 5 percent); or -“ask replacement of insulin detemir with glargine for glycemic control” (n = 3; 2 percent). Only 87 (57 percent) lawsuits reported the patients diabetes type: type 1 (n = 42; 28% percent or 2 (n = 45; 29 percent). Most of this judicialization came from private outpatient clinics (n = 116; 76 percent) and 99 (65 percent) were prescribed by endocrinologists.
CONCLUSIONS:Judicial decisions are still insufficiently underpinned by scientific evidence (only the patients drug needs claim has been recorded to justify supply) and are incomplete regarding objective diagnostic variables. Also, the judges awareness of interdisciplinary measures to achieve diabetic patients glycemic control, besides complementary drugs, may improve the Brazilian judicialization burden.
VP69 Mapping Brazilian Nuclear Medicine Installed Capacity And Perspectives
- Lorena Pozzo, Evelinda Trindade
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- Journal:
- International Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care / Volume 33 / Issue S1 / 2017
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 12 January 2018, pp. 180-181
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INTRODUCTION:
Guidelines compliance, with a priori non-invasive and earlier tests and interventions, depends on access. This study investigates the Brazilian Unified Health System (SUS) outpatient access to nuclear medicine procedures through SUS data comparison with those from the National Commission of Nuclear Energy (CNEN: Comissão Nacional de Energia Nuclear).
METHODS:Data provided by the SUS outpatient database (SIA-DATASUS) regarding procedures performed from 2013 to 2016 was compared with data from institutions (Nuclear Medicine Services and Cyclotron Facilities) and radioprotection supervisors with numbers certified by CNEN.
RESULTS:CNEN has authorized 420 nuclear medicine institutions (.20 per million inhabitants) and certified 294 radioprotection supervisors (.14 per million inhabitants), and 1.4 services per supervisor. There are 457 graduated professionals qualified for radioactive sources preparation, use and handling for diagnostic and therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals (.9 professionals / installation). During the last four years, 08 new nuclear medicine facilities were authorized by CNEN. The number of nuclear medicine procedures performed slightly increased in the South, but remained constant in other regions. Annual SUS reimbursements increased by 21.2 percent on average for the 03 PET/CT (Positron emission tomography–computed tomography) adopted procedures: regional analysis showed the Central-West as the highest growth area (70.8 percent), compared to the South (53.4 percent), North-East region (30.8 percent), and the South-East (5 percent). Currently, thirteen Cyclotron Facilities operate in Brazil: South-East (six), South (three), North-East (three) and Central-West (one). Some nuclear medicine procedures largely outnumber the average increase: for example, reticuloendothelial system scintigraphy (513.9 percent), gastric transit scintigraphy (112.8 percent), and thyroid screening with suppression/stimulation test (100.6 percent). However, myocardial scintigraphy (stress and rest) and bone scintigraphy with or without blood flow still correspond to 82 percent of total nuclear medicine in vivo procedures.
CONCLUSIONS:Regional disparity is quantitatively depicted in Brazil and reflects access to SUS nuclear medicine procedures. This denotes a potential for improvements related to nuclear medicine areas, for example developments concerning new PET/CT coverage, new radiopharmaceuticals research, and national and international training.
Internet Information Sources for the Identification of Emerging Health Technologies: A Starting Point
- Evelinda Trindade, Leigh-Ann Topfer, Mara De Giusti
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- Journal:
- International Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care / Volume 14 / Issue 4 / Fall 1998
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 10 March 2009, pp. 644-651
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The basis of an early warning system for new and emerging health technologies is information, and in particular, information that has been selectively extracted from the huge quantity of data in the fields of medicine, science, and biobusiness. The information will be useful only if presented in a format suitable to the needs of health care decision makers and produced at the time most likely to influence the introduction or diffusion of new technologies. In 1997 the Canadian Coordinating Office for Health Technology Assessment (CCOHTA) began a one-year pilot project to identify and provide information on developments in medical technologies that may have a significant impact on health care in Canada. We began by examining the information available to us through the Internet, based on the assumption that electronic sources can offer more timely access to a greater range of information, often with little or no cost involved. It was important to identify the sites that offered the most relevant information in the least amount of time.