The association between outpatient continuation/maintenance electroconvulsive therapy, readmission risk and total direct cost in patients with depressive, bipolar and psychotic disorders: A naturalistic retrospective cohort study

The transdiagnostic effect of continuation/maintenance ECT (CM-ECT) across mood and psychotic disorders on hospital psychiatric readmission risk and total direct cost remains unclear. A naturalistic retrospective analysis of 540 patients who received inpatient acute ECT treatment from May 2017 to Ma...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of affective disorders 2023-10, Vol.338, p.289-298
Hauptverfasser: Koh, Azriel H.K., Tan, Xiao Wei, Tor, Phern Chern, Chatterton, Mary Lou, Martin, Donel M., Loo, Colleen K.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The transdiagnostic effect of continuation/maintenance ECT (CM-ECT) across mood and psychotic disorders on hospital psychiatric readmission risk and total direct cost remains unclear. A naturalistic retrospective analysis of 540 patients who received inpatient acute ECT treatment from May 2017 to Mar 2021 in a tertiary psychiatric institution. Patients were assessed with validated clinical rating scales pre-ECT and after the first 6 treatments of a course of inpatient acute ECT. After discharge, patients who continued with CM-ECT were compared with those not receiving CM-ECT using survival analysis of hospital readmission. Total direct cost (hospitalisation and ECT treatment cost) was also analysed. All patients were subjected to a standard post-discharge monitoring program with case managers checking in on the patients regularly after discharge and ensuring they were given an outpatient appointment within a month of discharge. Both cohorts had significant improvement in their rating scales scores after their first six 6 sessions of inpatient acute ECT. Patients who continued with CM-ECT after completing their inpatient acute ECT (mean number of acute ECT: N = 9.9, SD 5.3), had a significantly lower risk of readmission [adjusted hazard ratio of 0.68 (95 % CI: 0.49–0.94, p = 0.020)]. Patients who received CM-ECT also had a significantly lower average total direct cost compared to those who did not (SGD$35,259 vs SGD$61,337). For patients with mood disorders, the CM-ECT group had a significantly lower inpatient ECT cost, hospitalisation cost and total direct costs compared to those without CM-ECT. The naturalistic study cannot prove a causal relationship between CM-ECT and reduced readmission and lower healthcare costs. CM-ECT is associated with lower readmission risks and lower total direct healthcare costs for the treatment of mood and psychotic disorders, especially for mood disorders. •Little evidence on the cost-effectiveness of continuation/maintenance ECT (CM-ECT) in mood and psychotic disorders.•CM-ECT is associated with lower readmission risks and lower healthcare costs in both mood and psychotic disorders.•CM-ECT appears relatively more cost-effectiveness in mood disorders.
ISSN:0165-0327
1573-2517
DOI:10.1016/j.jad.2023.06.016