Narbro Kristina, Agren Göran, Jonsson Egon, Näslund Ingmar, Sjöström Lars, Peltonen Markku
SOS Secretariat, Department of Internal Medicine, Sahlgrenska University Hospital, SE-413 45 Göteborg, Sweden.
Arch Intern Med. 2002 Oct 14;162(18):2061-9. doi: 10.1001/archinte.162.18.2061.
Obesity is associated with increased morbidity rates and pharmaceutical costs. To what extent various medication costs are affected by intentional weight loss is unknown.
A cross-sectional comparison of the use of prescribed pharmaceuticals was conducted in 1286 obese individuals in the Swedish Obese Subjects (SOS) intervention study and 958 randomly selected reference individuals. Medication changes for 6 years after bariatric surgery were evaluated in 510 surgically and 455 conventionally treated SOS patients.
Compared with the reference group, obese individuals were more often taking diabetes mellitus, cardiovascular disease, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory and pain, and asthma medications (risk ratios ranging from 2.3-9.2). Average annual costs for all medications were 1400 Swedish kronor (SEK) (US $140) in obese individuals and 800 SEK (US $80) in the reference population (P<.001). Average yearly medication costs during follow-up were 1849 (US $185) in surgically treated patients (weight change -16%) and 1905 SEK (US $190) in weight-stable conventionally treated patients (P =.87). The surgical group had lower costs for diabetes mellitus (difference: -94 SEK/y (-US $9]) and cardiovascular disease medications (difference: -186 SEK/y (-US $19]) but higher costs for gastrointestinal tract disorder (difference: +135 SEK/y [US $13]) and anemia and vitamin deficiency medications (difference: +50 SEK/y [US $5]).
Use and cost of medications are markedly increased in obese vs reference populations. Surgical obesity treatment lowers diabetes mellitus and cardiovascular disease medication costs but increases other medication costs, resulting in similar total costs for surgically and conventionally treated obese individuals for 6 years.
肥胖与发病率增加及药物费用上升相关。各种药物费用在多大程度上受刻意减肥的影响尚不清楚。
在瑞典肥胖受试者(SOS)干预研究中的1286名肥胖个体和958名随机选择的对照个体中,对处方药的使用情况进行了横断面比较。对510名接受手术治疗和455名接受传统治疗的SOS患者进行了6年的减肥手术后药物变化评估。
与对照组相比,肥胖个体更常服用糖尿病、心血管疾病、非甾体抗炎和止痛以及哮喘药物(风险比为2.3 - 9.2)。肥胖个体所有药物的年均费用为1400瑞典克朗(SEK)(140美元),对照人群为800 SEK(80美元)(P <.001)。随访期间,手术治疗患者的年均药物费用为1849(185美元)(体重变化 -16%),体重稳定的传统治疗患者为1905 SEK(190美元)(P = 0.87)。手术组糖尿病药物费用较低(差异:-94 SEK/年[-9美元]),心血管疾病药物费用较低(差异:-186 SEK/年[-19美元]),但胃肠道疾病药物费用较高(差异:+135 SEK/年[13美元]),贫血和维生素缺乏药物费用较高(差异:+50 SEK/年[5美元])。
与对照人群相比,肥胖人群的药物使用和费用显著增加。手术治疗肥胖可降低糖尿病和心血管疾病药物费用,但会增加其他药物费用,导致手术治疗和传统治疗的肥胖个体6年的总费用相似。