Facial Transplantation in a Nationalized Health System: The Canadian Experience

Plast Reconstr Surg Glob Open. 2021 Jan 25;9(1):e3357. doi: 10.1097/GOX.0000000000003357. eCollection 2021 Jan.

Abstract

Facial transplantation (FT) is recognized as the ultimate reconstruction for severely disfigured patients. The substantial cost of these procedures in a nationalized health system has not been extensively published. The first Canadian FT performed in May 2018 was a great opportunity to address this subject and evaluate the viability of such a program.

Methods: A detailed patient chart review was performed and a cost per unit approach was used to estimate the procedure cost. The preoperative, operative, and the postoperative periods up to 1-year after the surgery were analyzed. Financial support from private sponsors and Hospital Fund donations were considered. The literature on international FT and national solid organ transplantation was reviewed.

Results: The overall 1-year cost was estimated at $440,224 (2018 CAD). The costs are explained by a long hospital length of stay, costly immunosuppressive therapy, and high immunosuppression-related complications. Those findings are consistent with international FT literature. The societal impact of the surgery was minimized with a $36,921 (2018 CAD) grant obtained from an external contributor. Interestingly, the hospital foundation sustained a 794% increase in donations ($1,787,148; 2019 CAD) the year following the surgery.

Conclusion: Our experience confirmed that the combination of private funding, with positive goodwill and hospital donations, is a workable model for innovative surgery in the setting of a nationalized health system with financial restrictions.