Bullano Michael F, Willey Vincent, Hauch Ole, Wygant Gail, Spyropoulos Alex C, Hoffman Lauren
HealthCore, Inc., 800 Delaware Ave., Wilmington, DE 19801, USA.
J Manag Care Pharm. 2005 Oct;11(8):663-73. doi: 10.18553/jmcp.2005.11.8.663.
To measure the per-event health plan costs for acute and follow-up treatment not directed by a clinical study protocol in a group of commercially insured patients in 2 managed care organizations following an incident hospitalization that included a diagnosis for a venous thromboembolism (VTE) event.
A cohort of patients with an incident in-hospital VTE event, consisting of deep vein thrombosis (DVT), or pulmonary embolism (PE), or both DVT + PE, was retrospectively identified from the administrative claims databases of 2 large U.S. health care plans. Inclusion criteria were (a) an inpatient VTE event between January 1, 1998, and December 31, 2000, (b) no VTE diagnosis or anticoagulation therapy 3 months prior to the incident VTE in-hospital event, (c) at least 1 anticoagulation pharmacy fill following the incident hospital VTE, and (d) continuous health plan enrollment 3 months prior to and 6 months following the incident hospital VTE event. Total costs were reported on a per-event basis and consisted of the aggregated amount paid by the health plan to the provider after subtraction of member cost-share. Costs were collected separately, first for the incident VTE event for all patients identified and second for patients who had at least 1 of the following events in the follow-up period: bleed requiring or not requiring hospitalization, a recurrent VTE event requiring hospitalization, or a recurrent VTE and bleed (VTE + bleed) event requiring hospitalization. Costs were compared between incident diagnosis groups using multivariate generalized linear model techniques.
A total of 2,147 patients (DVT=1,499 [69.8%], PE=373 [17.4%], DVT+PE= 275 [12.8%]) were identified (mean age=61.6standard deviation [SD] 16 years; 46.3% male) and were followed for an average of 21.3 (median, 19.2) months. Disease severity was high in these patients, including 59.2% with a history of or active malignancy. The prevalence of VTE was 2.04 per 100,000 study-eligible health plan members. For the incident VTE events, average costs were 7,712+/-18,339 US dollars (median, 3,131 US dollars) per incident DVT event; 9,566+/-13,512 US dollars (median, 6,424 US dollars) per PE incident event; and 12,200+/-24,038 US dollars (median, 6,678 US dollars) per incident DVT+PE event. Warfarin treatment following the incident VTE event was administered to 97.3% of patients for an average of 6.7 (median, 5.0) months at an average cost of 19.40 US dollars per patient per month. During the average period of 21.3 months, 534 patients (24.9%) experienced an average of 1.24 bleed or recurrent VTE events per patient that required hospitalization at a mean cost of 14,975 US dollars per event or 2,101 US dollars per patient per year. For patients with a bleed in the follow-up period that required hospitalization, average costs were 12,326+/-24,448 US dollars (median, 5,736 US dollars) per recurrent VTE; 15,339+/-52,029 US dollars (median, 4,999 US dollars) per bleed; or 24,085+/-65,411 US dollars (median, 10,185 US dollars) per recurrent VTE + bleed event. During the follow-up period, a total of 612 patients (28.5%) experienced 1,489 recurrent bleed events that did not require hospitalization, at an average cost of 239+/-386 US dollars (median, 95 US dollars) per event. There were no significant differences in mean total costs for all pair-wise comparisons between the 3 incident diagnosis groups.
Of patients who experienced a VTE event during the incident hospital stay for any diagnosis, 1 in 4 experienced an average of 1.24 bleed or recurrent VTE events that required hospitalization in the 21 months of follow-up and incurred an average health plan cost of 14,957 US dollars per event. These data may be of interest to managed care decision makers when evaluating the cost impact of new therapies or providing more comprehensive anticoagulation management services for existing therapies.
测量在两家管理式医疗组织中,一组商业保险患者在因静脉血栓栓塞(VTE)事件住院后,非临床研究方案指导的急性及后续治疗的每次事件的健康计划成本。
从美国两家大型医疗保健计划的管理索赔数据库中,回顾性识别出一组因住院期间发生VTE事件(包括深静脉血栓形成(DVT)、肺栓塞(PE)或两者皆有)而住院的患者。纳入标准为:(a)1998年1月1日至2000年12月31日期间的住院VTE事件;(b)在事件性住院VTE事件前3个月无VTE诊断或抗凝治疗;(c)事件性住院VTE后至少有1次抗凝药物配药记录;(d)在事件性住院VTE事件前3个月和后6个月持续参加健康计划。总成本按每次事件报告,包括健康计划在扣除成员费用分担后支付给提供者的汇总金额。成本分别收集,首先针对所有识别出的患者的事件性VTE事件,其次针对在随访期内至少发生以下事件之一的患者:需要或不需要住院治疗的出血、需要住院治疗的复发性VTE事件、或需要住院治疗的复发性VTE和出血(VTE+出血)事件。使用多变量广义线性模型技术比较事件诊断组之间的成本。
共识别出2147例患者(DVT=1499例[69.8%],PE=373例[17.4%],DVT+PE=275例[12.8%])(平均年龄=61.6岁,标准差[SD]16岁;46.3%为男性),平均随访21.3个月(中位数,19.2个月)。这些患者疾病严重程度较高,其中59.2%有既往或活动性恶性肿瘤病史。VTE患病率为每100,000名符合研究条件的健康计划成员中有2.04例。对于事件性VTE事件,每次事件性DVT事件的平均成本为7712±18339美元(中位数,3131美元);每次PE事件的平均成本为9566±13512美元(中位数,6,424美元);每次事件性DVT+PE事件的平均成本为12200±24038美元(中位数,6678美元)。事件性VTE事件后,97.3%的患者接受了华法林治疗,平均治疗6.7个月(中位数,5.0个月),平均每位患者每月成本为19.40美元。在平均21.3个月的期间内,534例患者(24.9%)平均每位患者经历了1.24次需要住院治疗的出血或复发性VTE事件,每次事件的平均成本为14975美元,或每位患者每年2101美元。对于随访期内需要住院治疗的出血患者,每次复发性VTE的平均成本为12326±24448美元(中位数,5736美元);每次出血的平均成本为15339±52029美元(中位数,4999美元);或每次复发性VTE+出血事件的平均成本为24085±65411美元(中位数,10185美元)。在随访期内,共有612例患者(28.5%)经历了1489次不需要住院治疗的复发性出血事件,每次事件的平均成本为239±386美元(中位数,95美元)。3个事件诊断组之间所有两两比较的平均总成本无显著差异。
在因任何诊断而住院期间发生VTE事件的患者中,四分之一的患者在21个月的随访期内平均经历了1.24次需要住院治疗的出血或复发性VTE事件,每次事件的平均健康计划成本为14957美元。这些数据在管理式医疗决策者评估新疗法的成本影响或为现有疗法提供更全面的抗凝管理服务时可能会有用。