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Article Abstract

Background: Surgical standardization has been shown to decrease costs without impacting quality; however, there is limited literature on this subject regarding ankle fracture fixation. Methods. Between October 5, 2015 and September 27, 2017, a total of 168 patients with isolated ankle fractures who underwent open reduction, internal fixation (ORIF) were analyzed. Financial data were analyzed across ankle fracture classification type, implant characteristics, and surgeons. Bivariate analyses were conducted. One-way analysis of variance was used to compare hardware costs across all 5 surgeons. Linear regression analysis was used to determine if hardware cost differed by surgeon when accounting for fracture type.

Results: The mean contribution margin was $4853 (SD $6446). There was a significant difference in implant costs by surgeon (range, lowest-cost surgeon: $471 [SD $283] to $1609 [SD $819]; < .001). There was no difference in the use of a suture button or locking plate by fracture type ( = .13); however, the cost of the implant was significantly higher if a suture button or locking plate was used ($1014 [SD $666] vs $338 [SD $176]; < .001). There was an association between surgeon 3 (β = 200.32 [95% CI 6.18-394.47]; = .043) and surgeon 4 (β = 1131.07 [95% CI 906.84-1355.30]; < .001) and higher hardware costs.

Conclusions: Even for the same ankle fracture type, a wide variation in implant costs exists. The lack of standardization among surgeons accounted for a nearly 3.5-fold difference, on average, between the lowest- and highest-cost surgeons, negatively affecting contribution margin.

Levels Of Evidence: Level IV.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/19386400211009357DOI Listing

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