Prof. Dr. med. Jörg Kalff
Department of Surgery
kalff@uni-bonn.de View member: Prof. Dr. med. Jörg Kalff
Zeitschrift fur Gastroenterologie
INTRODUCTION: Short-bowel-syndrome (SBS) is an often chronic disease with high morbidity. The aim of this study was to evaluate the complexity of SBS treatment and the economic burden on a treating hospital.
METHODS: Anonymized data of eleven consecutive SBS patients from the University Hospital of Bonn were included. Parameters of medical resources were considered for year of diagnosis (YOD) and a follow-up (FU) period of three years. Subsequently, costs were evaluated according to the corresponding catalogues.
RESULTS: Median inpatient days were 96 days in YOD and decreased to three days in the third year of FU. Median cost of inpatient treatment decreased from approximately 84 500 € auf 3200 €. While major visceral surgery was usually required in the YOD, catheter-associated interventions dominated during further FU. Actual reimbursement according to the G-DRG covered approximately 50 % of inpatient treatment cost, for outpatient care only est. 16.5 % of costs were covered. Annual costs for medication, parenteral nutrition and GLP-2-analogon treatment added up to 6752 €, 48 485 € and 138 442 €, respectively.
CONCLUSIONS: The interdisciplinary medical care of SBS-patients is resource-intensive and expensive. The required treatment shifts from the in- to the outpatient sector. Both settings are at present not adequately reimbursed. Hence, this imbalance may endanger adequate care for SBS-patients in the future in times of economic rationale. In concordance with other rare disease management programs, additional measures are needed to provide and improve interdisciplinary treatment of SBS.
© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York.
PMID: 32353889
Department of Surgery
kalff@uni-bonn.de View member: Prof. Dr. med. Jörg Kalff