There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.
Abstract
A review of the existing evidence on economic costs of treatment of long-bone fracture
non-unions has retrieved 9 papers. Mostly the tibial shaft non-unions have been utilised
as models for these economic analyses. Novel treatment strategies like BMP-7 grafting,
Ilizarov ring external fixation or supplementary use of therapeutic ultrasound devices
have been compared with standard methods of treatment focusing on direct and indirect
costs and expenses. A cost-identification query was conducted and revealed costs of
pound 15,566, pound 17,200 and pound 16,330 for humeral, femoral, and tibial non-unions
respectively on a "best-case scenario". The existing scientific evidence can only
imply the extent of the economic burden of long-bone non-unions. Further systematic
studies are needed to assess the direct medical, direct non-medical, indirect, and
monetised quality of life and psychosocial costs of non-unions.