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Original Article

A timeline for predicting durable medical equipment needs and interventions for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis patients

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Pages 110-115 | Received 05 Jan 2009, Accepted 18 Feb 2009, Published online: 26 Feb 2010
 

Abstract

ALS is progressive with increasing patient needs for durable medical equipment (DME) and interventions (gastric feeding tube – PEG, and non-invasive ventilation – NIV). We performed a chart review of deceased patients to determine the time-course of needs and their estimated costs. A timeline of needs was based on when clinic personnel felt an item was necessary. The point in time when an item or intervention was needed was expressed as a percentage of a patient's total disease duration. A wide range of DME and interventions was needed irrespective of site of ALS symptom onset (bulbar, upper, lower extremity), beginning at 10% of disease duration of lower extremity onset and increasing thereafter for all sites. The cumulative probability of costs of items and interventions began at 25%–50% of disease duration and increased to between $18,000 and $32,000 (USD), highest for lower extremity onset due to the cost of wheelchairs. We conclude that a high percentage of ALS patients will need a full spectrum of major DME items and interventions during the second half of disease duration. This results in a linear rise in costs over the second half of the disease duration.

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