key: cord-0980088-hsspyb2h authors: Schatz, Caroline; Leidl, Reiner; Plötz, Werner; Bredow, Katharina; Buschner, Peter title: Preoperative patients’ health decrease moderately, while hospital costs increase for hip and knee replacement due to the first COVID-19 lockdown in Germany date: 2022-02-24 journal: Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc DOI: 10.1007/s00167-022-06904-9 sha: 25adaa366fd8038ee39cb6580501d254bdea85eb doc_id: 980088 cord_uid: hsspyb2h PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was a comparison between osteoarthritis patients with primary hip and knee replacements before, during and after the first COVID-19 lockdown in Germany. Patients’ preoperative health status is assumed to decrease, owing to delayed surgeries. Costs for patients with osteoarthritis were assumed to increase, for example, due to higher prices for protective equipment. Hence, a comparison of patients treated before, during and after the first lockdown is conducted. METHODS: In total, 852 patients with primary hip or knee replacement were included from one hospital in Germany. Preoperative health status was measured with the WOMAC Score and the EQ-5D-5L. Hospital unit costs were calculated using a standardised cost calculation. Kruskal–Wallis tests and Chi-squared tests were applied for the statistical analyses. RESULTS: The mean of the preoperative WOMAC Score was slightly higher (p < 0.01) for patients before the first lockdown, compared with patients afterwards. Means of the EQ-5D-5L were not significantly different regarding the lockdown status (NS). Length of stay was significantly reduced by approximately 1 day (p < 0.001). Total inpatient hospital unit costs per patient and per day were significantly higher for patients during and after the first lockdown (p < 0.001). CONCLUSION: Preoperative health, measured with the WOMAC Score, worsened slightly for patients after the first lockdown compared with patients undergoing surgery before COVID-19. Preoperative health, measured using the EQ-5D-5L, was unaffected. Inpatient hospital unit costs increased significantly with the COVID-19 pandemic. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Retrospective cohort study, III. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s00167-022-06904-9. The global outbreak of the corona-virus-pandemic (COVID-19) emphasised the importance of effective public health strategies all over the world [31] . In Germany, the government pronounced the first nationwide socioeconomic lockdown on 16 March 2020. To prevent an overburdening of the health care system, the Ministry of Health requested all hospitals to delay their non-urgent surgeries. The postponement led to a reduction in total knee replacements (TKR) and total hip replacements (THR) for patients with osteoarthritis (OA). After the first lockdown, most restrictions were cancelled on 16 June. The limited literature about COVID-19 and preoperative health, measured using patient-reported outcome measurements (PROM), indicated increasing pain for postponed patients, decreasing physical function and activity, and ambiguous results for mental health [6, 11] . However, a small sample size study indicated increasing health-related quality of life (HRQoL) [14] . In hospitals, a wide range of measures was introduced to resume TKR and THR [12] . Literature about hospital unit costs was very scarce, and one study found that compensation payments by the government were not sufficient [29] . Hence, an investigation about the impact of COVID-19 on preoperative PROMs and costs was needed. To our knowledge, this is the first study analysing whether primary THR and TKR patients were affected in routine care, cross-sectional with 852 patients, covering a more comprehensive cohort than the subgroup of postponed patients. Preoperative patients' health serves as a predictor for postoperative outcomes and is, therefore, of high clinical relevance [28] . Furthermore, the EQ-5D is evaluated, additionally to the WOMAC. Similarly, to our knowledge, hospital unit costs for THR and TKR and COVID-19 were not investigated to date. These costs were important, because, in the short run, the retrospective diagnosis-related groups (DRG) system could not consider fast increasing unit costs. Accordingly, two hypotheses were developed. H1: The mean of preoperative health, measured with the WOMAC, the EQ-5D and the EQ VAS, for patients with primary THR or TKR, is equal before, during and after the first COVID-19 lockdown. H2: The mean of hospital unit costs for patients with primary THR or TKR is equal before, during and after the first COVID-19 lockdown. The data were part of a project of the Munich Network Health Care Research-MobilE-Net, from one hospital, comprising 869 patients. Patients with OA of the hip or knee and a primary replacement of the joint were included, retrospectively. This cohort was classified into three groups. The first group included patients before the COVID-19 pandemic, from 5 August 2019 to 15 March 2020. The second group included patients during the lockdown period, from 16 March to 16 June, and the third group included patients between 17 June 2020 and the lockdown light, beginning on 1 November 2020. Gender, date of birth and the indication of hip versus knee were collected from the clinical information system and the pain medication from the admission sheet. The indication, whether a patient received a hip or a knee replacement, was included as a dummy variable, to control for differences in these patient groups. A separate analysis of hips and knees was not performed, because the number of patients during the lockdown was too small. Age was calculated as the difference between the date of birth and the admission date, categorised below the mean of 70 years and above. Gender, indication, physical activity and pain medication were included as binary variables. The documentation of physicians was used to transform pre-illnesses into ICD-10 codes. Then, the comorbidity indices of Elixhauser [5] and Charlson [2] with the adaptation to orthopaedics from Menendez [16] were calculated with the body mass index (BMI) included from medical records. For the anaesthesiological assessment, the ASA Score [20] was collected from the medical documentation. Prior to the surgery, hospitalised patients answered the WOMAC questionnaire, the EQ-5D-5L including the EQ VAS, and the questions about physical activity. The WOMAC was transformed to a scale, ranging from 0 to 100 to allow comparisons with other publications, as suggested by Singh et al. [23] . Hospital unit costs, initially calculated for the National Institute for the reimbursement system in Germany (InEK), were collected. This standardised cost calculation is a mixture of full costing with activity-based elements of inpatient costs at patient-level, where costs are calculated for an entire year, allocated to patients, with standardised allocation keys [27] . The three main cost components, ward, surgery and other costs were the basis for the cost analysis. Surgery costs included all costs related to the operating procedure including implants, technical equipment and personnel costs. Ward costs comprised all costs associated with treating the patient after surgery in a normal ward, including personnel costs, material costs and drugs. Other costs were the remaining costs, for example intensive care, radiology, laboratory and therapy. Overhead costs for the medical and non-medical infrastructure were allocated to all cost centres and, therefore, included in ward, surgery and other costs. Costs per day were calculated using the length of stay for each patient. Costs from 2019 were inflated by 0.5%. Single missing items in the cost data were replaced with the mean of the entire cohort for two patients and one patient without cost data was deleted. From 869 patients, 1 with no cost data was deleted, 3 patients were omitted, because of inconsistent questionnaires, and another 3 were deleted because the primary diagnosis was not osteoarthritis. Missing values were found in EQ-5D-5L dimensions of usual activities (1 patient) and self-care (20 patients). These single-dimension missing items were replaced by the nearest value generating the patient's EQ VAS using the general population estimates of Leidl and Reitmeir [15] . Outliers were detected with boxplots, and extreme values above a threshold of twice the 75% quantile were deleted (10 patients). Patients with EQ VAS values of 0 were not deleted, because this phenomenon has already been discussed in the literature [21] . 852 patients remained in the analysis. The reporting of this study follows the STROBE checklist [30] . To account for potential biases, data collection and data analysis were done by two independent researchers, KB and CS. All patients, who were hospitalised with osteoarthritis and primary THR or TKR, within the given time periods, had an equal chance to be part of the study. A correlation matrix was calculated to test multicollinearity between independent variables, with a threshold of > 0.7 indicating a high correlation [4] . All correlations of control variables were below this threshold. The length of stay correlated highly (> 0.7) with the dependent variable of ward costs per patient and moderately with total cost per patient (> 0.5). Hence, the costs were calculated per patient and per day to include the length of stay into the dependent variable. PROMs were modelled as continuous variables. Homogeneity of variance among groups was tested with the Levene test statistic [9] , and the normal distribution was examined with the Shapiro-Wilk test [22] . For continuous variables, the non-parametric test of Kruskal and Wallis [13] , and, for the analysis of categorical variables, Chi-squared tests were used. The applied minimum significance level was p < 0.05. The statistical analyses were done with R [8, 10, 18, 19, 26, [32] [33] [34] . The description of the study cohort is depicted in Table 1 . During the lockdown, more male patients were treated, compared with the cohorts before and after. Physical activity remained stable during the lockdown but reduced afterwards. More severely ill patients, measured using the ASA Score, were treated during and after the lockdown, compared with patients before. Hence, the ASA Score differed significantly (p < 0.001) and physical activity moderately (p < 0.01), whereas almost no significant difference was found for gender (p < 0.05), and no statistical differences for comorbidities, age, pain medication and the indication of THR versus TKR (NS) ( Table 1 ). The standardised WOMAC score increased for the group during the first lockdown and after the first lockdown. T. The main changes were found in pain (p < 0.01) and function (p < 0.01). Changes in WOMAC stiffness, but also in the EQ VAS and in the EQ-5D-5L dimensions were very small, resulting in non-significant results (NS) ( Table 2) . Ward and surgery costs were identified as the main cost components responsible for approximately 80% of total costs. Total costs increased per patient during the first lockdown and after the first lockdown. Costs for surgery were almost stable, whereas ward costs rose for patients treated during and after the lockdown compared with patients before. The length of stay was reduced significantly by The significance levels of all sensitivity analyses for total costs per patient did not change for the Kruskal-Wallis test. Although, the Kruskal-Wallis test statistic reduced the ward costs per patient for the third assumption from p < 0.001 to p < 0.01. Sensitivity analyses for costs per day were not performed, because the differences at base line are higher and hence the significance would not change, either. Robustness of results were further tested by additional sensitivity analyses, also including a multivariate GLM model, the results of which did not raise any robustness concerns (Table 3, Supplement) . For the PROMs, the EQ-5D-5L dimensions were defined as ordinal variables instead of continuous variables and, therefore, tested with Chi-squared tests. All dimensions were not significant, except for the pain dimension with a change in the significance level from p < 0.05 to p < 0.01. The most important finding of this study was the moderate increase in pain and function, measured with the WOMAC Score, for patients with primary THR and TKR, and the simultaneously rising of costs per patient and per day during and after the lockdown, compared with patients treated before. These findings are generally in line with those of Endstrasser et al. [6] , because differences for pain and function were found between the group before and after the lockdown, but not during. Although the effects were approximately half the magnitude, it should be considered that all patients undergoing TKR or THR were included in this study, not only the postponed ones. This delayed effect could be the reason for the improvement in HRQoL shortly after the lockdown, reported by Larghi et al. [14] . Increased pain was also found by Knebel et al. [11] , but higher use of pain medication was not found. The dimension of anxiety/depression in the EQ-5D-5L was not significant, which strengthens the results from Endstrasser et al. [6] who found no influence on mental health and was partly in line with Knebel et al. [11] who found psychosocial distress only for middle-aged women. Given that the minimum clinically important difference (MCID) for the WOMAC Score ranging between 2 and 10 points (Siviero et al. [24] , Clement et al. [3] ), the 4.7 points found in this study is right in between, thus casting doubt on clinical relevance. Nevertheless, there may be a response shift towards perceived better outcomes, because TKR patients have been found to evaluate their HRQoL with a positive attitude just before surgery [7] . Implant costs as a main cost driver, reported by Stargardt [25] , were found indirectly, because the implants were a major part of the surgery costs, whereas the COVID-19 pandemic had no significant impact on these costs. An explanation for stable surgery costs might be caused by the implants, because they are often goods on consignment, and without using them, no costs have to be paid. Although, there were additional costs, for example for COVID-19 tests and protective equipment, included in the costs for ward, and other costs. Furthermore, COVID-19-positive patients might cause extra costs for special care and isolation on the ward with increased demands on nurses. The increased demands on personnel in general, for example because of quarantine, might have caused more temporary employment, with additional costs. The recommendations from Kort et al. [12] included a reduction in length of stay which was discovered in this study and leads to increased costs per day. The problem of idle capacity is well known in the field of cost accounting. Full-costing, top-down approaches cover these costs more adequately than solely activity-based ones [17] . The standardised cost calculation applied in this study was a mixture of both. Hence, costs for idle capacity were discovered, especially per day, where costs were allocated top-down not only to each patient but also for each day. Length of stay was highly correlated with ward costs, which was partly in line with Carducci et al. [1] , but a correlation was also found for total costs and length of stay. The reason for this result was the calculation methodology of the costs, with days partly as allocation keys. There are several limitations regarding the study design, the PROMs and the costs. The investigated lockdown status was not equal regarding the time period or the number of patients. This was determined as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic and its lockdown. The smallest group consisted of 105 patients, to ensure robust results. This is also the reason why a classification of patients into hip and knee was not performed. PROMs were collected during usual care with no consideration as to whether patients were on waiting lists, postponed the surgery voluntarily or had a planned surgery, as before the COVID-19 pandemic. Costs were evaluated for the study cohort of osteoarthritis with primary THR and TKR, considering neither the classification of DRGs nor the department structure of orthopaedics and trauma surgery. In addition, costs were compared in different seasonal settings, the cohort before COVID-19 in autumn and winter, the lockdown cohort in spring and the cohort after the lockdown in summer. Generally, the standardised cost calculation smoothed seasonal effects and elective THR and TKR were conducted equally across seasons, which reduced a potential bias. In addition, some seasonal effects probably remained, undistinguished from effects influenced by the COVID-19 pandemic, because this was itself a time-related variable. All patients who met the criteria for the study and signed the consent form were included. Furthermore, the analysis took place in one hospital in Germany, deriving from a study on treatment outcomes and costs. This is a limitation to generalising the findings. Yet, this cost calculation approach could even be considered when the potential impact of idle capacity in TKR and THR is to be estimated, for example because of construction during day-to-day operation. Further research is necessary, especially for inpatient hospital costs, regarding the COVID-19 pandemic for several hospitals, internationally, and in diverse surgical and non-surgical departments. In addition, the impact of a reduced level of preoperative WOMAC Score on postoperative results should be investigated given the predictive power of the preoperative values, and if possible, also the impact of reduced length of stay. The COVID-19 pandemic caused major disturbances in hospitals, but preoperative HRQoL changed only moderately for patients with OA and primary THR or TKR. Measured using the WOMAC Score, the means of pain and function were slightly different for patients before and after the COVID-19 pandemic. The EQ-5D-5L and the EQ VAS did not indicate significant differences. The COVID-19 pandemic influenced the inpatient hospital unit costs per patient and per day significantly, especially ward costs and other costs. Costs for surgery remained stable, whereas length of stay was reduced significantly by 1 day. Patient characteristics were almost similar, except for the increased number of patients with an ASA Score above 2. 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