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Burden of Crohn’s disease in the United States: long-term healthcare and work-loss related costs

Ameur M. Manceur, Zhijie Ding, Erik Muser, Camilo Obando, Jennifer Voelker, Dominic Pilon, Frédéric Kinkead, Marie‐Hélène Lafeuille, Patrick Lefèbvre

2020Journal of Medical Economics45 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

AIMS: To quantify the long-term direct and indirect costs among patients with Crohn's disease (CD) and specific subgroups of these patients in the United States from the private payer's perspective. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This retrospective study used the OptumHealth Care Solutions, Inc database (01 January 1999-31 March 2017) to match (1:5) adult patients with ≥2 claims for CD to patients without inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Patterns observed during follow-up (i.e. biologics, opioids, or steroids; CD-related surgery; moderate-to-severe disease; and comorbidities) were used to identify CD subgroups. Comparisons of healthcare resource utilization, work loss days, and direct and indirect work loss-related costs were made between matched cohorts. Descriptive analyses of costs were conducted within each CD subgroup. RESULTS: < .001). The burden was numerically higher in the CD subgroups, with direct healthcare costs reaching $101,013 PPPY in the surgery subgroup. LIMITATIONS: Severity of CD was determined based on claims-based algorithms due to the lack of access to medical files. Absenteeism was imputed based on claims data, and presenteeism was not assessed. CONCLUSIONS: The direct healthcare and indirect work loss-related costs of patients with CD was significantly higher compared to patients without IBD over an average follow-up of 5 years.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineIndirect costsCohortInflammatory bowel diseaseHealth careRetrospective cohort studyCrohn's diseaseCohort studyInternal medicineDisease burdenDiseaseBusinessEconomicsAccountingEconomic growthInflammatory Bowel DiseasePregnancy and Medication ImpactAutoimmune and Inflammatory Disorders
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