Litcius/Paper detail

Economic Burden of Osteoporosis-Related Fractures in the US Medicare Population

Setareh A. Williams, Shanette G. Daigle, R. J. Weiss, Yamei Wang, Tarun Arora, Jeffrey R. Curtis

2020Annals of Pharmacotherapy118 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Osteoporosis-related fractures are an important public health burden. OBJECTIVE: To examine health care costs in Medicare patients with an osteoporosis-related fracture. METHODS: Medicare fee-for-service members with an osteoporosis-related fracture between January 1, 2010, to September 30, 2014 were included. A nonfracture comparator group was selected by propensity score matching. Generalized linear models using a gamma distribution were used to compare costs between fracture and nonfracture cohorts. RESULTS: A total of 885 676 Medicare beneficiaries had fracture(s) and met inclusion criteria. Average age was 80.5 (±8.4) years; 91% were White, and 94% female. Mean all-cause costs were greater in the fracture vs nonfracture cohort ($47 163.25 vs $16 034.61) overall and for men ($52 273.79 vs $17 352.68). The highest mean costs were for skilled nursing facility ($29 216), inpatient costs ($24 190.19), and hospice care ($20 996.83). The highest incremental costs versus the nonfracture cohort were for hip ($71 057.83 vs $16 807.74), spine ($37 543.87 vs $16 860.49), and radius/ulna ($24 505.27 vs $14 673.86). Total medical and pharmacy costs for patients who experienced a second fracture were higher compared with those who did not ($78 137.59 vs $44 467.47). Proportionally more patients in the fracture versus nonfracture cohort died (18% vs 9.3%), with higher death rates among men (20% vs 11%). CONCLUSION AND RELEVANCE: The current findings suggest a significant economic burden associated with fractures. Early identification and treatment of patients at high risk for fractures is of paramount importance for secondary prevention and reduced mortality.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineOsteoporosisCohortHip fractureMedicare AdvantagePropensity score matchingPharmacyMedical costsCohort studyEpidemiologyEmergency medicinePhysical therapyInternal medicineDemographyHealth careFamily medicineSociologyEconomicsEconomic growthBone health and osteoporosis researchHip and Femur FracturesStatistical Methods in Epidemiology