• Cephalalgia · Dec 2013

    Clinical Trial

    Occipital nerve stimulation for intractable chronic cluster headache or migraine: a critical analysis of direct treatment costs and complications.

    • Oliver Mueller, Hans-Christoph Diener, Philipp Dammann, Kasja Rabe, Vincent Hagel, Ulrich Sure, and Charly Gaul.
    • Department of Neurosurgery, University Hospital Essen, Germany.
    • Cephalalgia. 2013 Dec 1;33(16):1283-91.

    BackgroundOccipital nerve stimulation (ONS) has been shown to be effective for selected patients with intractable headache disorders. We performed a prospective critical evaluation of complications and direct treatment costs.MethodsTwenty-seven patients with chronic cluster headache (CCH, N  = 24) or chronic migraine (CM, N = 3) underwent a trial phase with bilateral ONS and subsequent implantation of a permanent generator (IPG), if responsive to treatment according to predefined criteria. Procedural and long-term complications as well as direct treatment costs of neuromodulation therapy of ONS were recorded over a mean follow-up period of 20 months (range 5-47 months).ResultsTwenty-five of 27 patients (93%) responded to treatment. Twenty-one complications in 14 patients were identified, necessitating reoperation in 13 cases. Overall treatment costs were €761,043, including hardware-related costs of €506,019, costs for primary hospital care of €210,496, and complications related to hospitalization costs of €44,528. This results in a per case-based cost of €9445 for hospitalization and €18,741 for hardware costs, totaling €28,186.ConclusionONS for treatment of refractory CCH and CM is a cost-intensive treatment option with a significant complication rate. Nevertheless, patients with refractory primary headache disorders may experience substantial relief of pain attacks, and headache days, respectively.

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