Cost of Pelvic Organ Prolapse Surgery in the United States

Subak LL., Waetjen LE., van den Eeden S., Thom DH., Vittinghoff E., Brown JS.
Obstet Gynecol 2001;98:646-651.

Objective

To estimate the annual direct cost to society of pelvic organ prolapse operations in the United States.

Methods

We multiplied the number of pelvic organ prolapse operations identified in the 1997 National Hospital Discharge Survey by national average Medicare reimbursement for physician services and hospitalizations. Although this reimbursement does not estimate the actual cost, it is a proxy for cost, which estimates what society pays for the procedures.

Results

In 1997, direct costs of pelvic organ prolapse surgery were 1012 million dollars (95% confidence interval CI 775 dollars, 1251 million), including 494 dollars million (49%) for vaginal hysterectomy, 279 million dollars (28%) for cystocele and rectocele repair, and 135 million dollars (13%) for abdominal hysterectomy. Physician services accounted for 29% (298 million dollars) of total costs, and hospitalization accounted for 71% (714 million dollars). Twenty-one percent of pelvic organ prolapse operations included urinary incontinence procedures (218 million dollars). If all operations were reimbursed by non-Medicare sources, the annual estimated cost would increase by 52% to 1543 million dollars.

Conclusion

The annual direct costs of operations for pelvic organ prolapse are substantial.

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