Trends, Payments, and Costs Associated with BMP Use in Medicare Beneficiaries Undergoing Spinal Fusion


Background context:

Bone morphogenic protein (BMP) promotes bony fusion but increases costs. Recent trends in BMP use among Medicare patients have not been well-characterized.


Purpose:

To assess utilization trends, complication, payments, and costs associated with BMP use in spinal fusion in a Medicare-insured population.


Study design/setting:

Retrospective cohort study PATIENT SAMPLE: : 316,070 patients who underwent spinal fusion in a 20% sample of Medicare-insured patients, 2006-2015 OUTCOME MEASURES: : Utilization trends across time and geography, complications, payments, and costs.


Methods:

Patients were stratified by fusion type and diagnosis. Multivariable logistic and linear regression were used to adjust for the effect of baseline characteristics on complications and total payments or cost, respectively.


Results:

BMP was used in 60,249 cases (19.1%). BMP utilization rates decreased from 23.1% in 2006 to 12.0% in 2015, most significantly in anterior cervical (7.5% to 3.1%), posterior cervical (17.0% to 8.3%), and posterior lumbar fusions (31.5% to 15.8%). There are significant state- and region-level geographic differences in BMP utilization. Across all years, states with the highest BMP use were Indiana (28.5%), Colorado (26.6%), and Nevada (25.7%). States with the lowest BMP use were Maine (2.3%), Vermont (8.2%), and Mississippi (10.4%). After multivariate risk adjustment, BMP use was associated with decreased overall complications in thoracic (OR (95% CI): 0.89 (0.81-0.99) and anterior lumbar fusions (OR (95% CI): 0.89 (0.84-0.95)), as well as increased reoperation rates in anterior cervical (OR (95% CI): 1.11 (1.04-1.19)), posterior cervical (OR (95% CI): 1.14 (1.04-1.25)), thoracic (OR (95% CI): 1.32 (1.23-1.41)), and posterior lumbar fusions (OR (95% CI): 1.11 (1.06-1.16)). BMP use was also associated with greater total costs, independent of fusion type, after multivariate risk adjustment (p < 0.0001). Payments, however, were comparable between groups in anterior and posterior cervical fusion with or without BMP. BMP use was associated with greater total payments in thoracic, anterior lumbar, and posterior lumbar fusions. Notably, the difference in payments was smaller than the associated cost increase in all fusion types.


Conclusions:

BMP use has declined across all fusion types over the last decade, after a peak in 2007. While BMP is associated with greater costs, reimbursement does not increase proportionally with BMP cost.


Keywords:

Bone morphogenic protein; Medicare; healthcare utilization; spinal fusion.

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