Chandran Arthi, Schaefer Caroline, Ryan Kellie, Baik Rebecca, McNett Michael, Zlateva Gergana
Pfizer Inc, New York, New York, USA.
J Manag Care Pharm. 2012 Jul-Aug;18(6):415-26. doi: 10.18553/jmcp.2012.18.6.415.
Patients with fibromyalgia report persistent widespread pain, fatigue, and substantial functional limitations, which may lead to high health resource use (HRU) and lost productivity. Previous analyses of the U.S. population have not examined the direct and indirect costs of fibromyalgia by severity level.
To assess (a) HRU, direct and indirect costs associated with fibromyalgia in routine clinical practice in the United States using a patient-centric approach, and (b) the relationship of fibromyalgia severity level to HRU and costs.
This study recruited a nonprobability convenience sample of 203 subjects aged 18 through 65 years between August 2008 and February 2009 from 20 U.S. community-based physician offices. Subjects had a prior diagnosis of fibromyalgia by a rheumatologist, neurologist, or pain specialist; received treatment at the enrolling physician's practice for at least 3 months; experienced widespread pain for at least 3 months; and experienced pain in the previous 24 hours. Subjects completed a 106-item patient questionnaire that included 5 validated health-related quality-of-life instruments and study-specific questions about demographics; clinical history; overall health; treatment satisfaction; and impact of fibromyalgia on cognitive function, daily activities, and employment status. Subjects also self-reported hours of unpaid informal caregiver time because of inability to perform daily activities (e.g., housework, child care), out-of-pocket expenses for medical and nonmedical services, and lost productivity related to fibromyalgia for the previous 4 weeks. The 20-item Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire total score was used to stratify subjects into fibromyalgia severity groups (0 to less than 39 = mild, 39 to less than 59 = moderate, 59 to 100 = severe). Staff at each site recorded clinical characteristics, HRU, and medication use attributable to fibromyalgia on a paper clinical case report form (CRF) based on a 3-month retrospective medical chart review. Unit costs for 2009 were assigned to the 3-month HRU data reported on the CRF and 4-week subject-reported lost productivity. Costs were then annualized and reported in the following categories: direct medical, direct nonmedical, and indirect. Differences across severity levels were evaluated using the Kruskal-Wallis test (continuous measures) and Pearson chi-square or Fisher's exact tests (categorical measures) at the 0.05 alpha level.
Of the 203 subjects, 21 (10.3%) had mild, 49 (24.1%) had moderate, and 133 (65.5%) had severe fibromyalgia. For subjects with mild, moderate, and severe fibromyalgia, respectively, the number of fibromyalgia-related medications (3-month means: 1.8, 2.3, and 2.8, P = 0.011) and office visits to health care providers (3-month means: 2.7, 5.2, and 6.9, P < 0.001) significantly differed across severity levels. Across severity levels, total medical and nonmedical out-of-pocket costs also differed (P = 0.025). Mean [median] 3-month total direct costs (including payer costs for HRU and out-of-pocket costs for medical and nonmedical services) were $1,213 [$1,150], $1,415 [$1,215], and $2,329 [$1,760] for subjects with mild, moderate, and severe fibromyalgia, respectively (P = 0.002); and mean [median] 3-month indirect costs (including subject-reported absenteeism, unemployment, disability, and the estimated value of unpaid informal care) were $1,341 [$0], $5,139 [$1,680], and $8,285 [$7,030] (P < 0.001). Mean total indirect costs accounted for 52.5%, 78.4%, and 78.1% of mean total costs for subjects with mild, moderate, and severe fibromyalgia, respectively.
Direct and indirect costs related to fibromyalgia are higher among subjects with worse fibromyalgia severity. Indirect costs account for a majority of fibromyalgia-related costs at all fibromyalgia severity levels.
纤维肌痛患者报告存在持续的广泛性疼痛、疲劳及严重的功能受限,这可能导致大量的卫生资源利用(HRU)及生产力损失。此前针对美国人群的分析未按严重程度级别研究纤维肌痛的直接和间接成本。
(a)采用以患者为中心的方法,评估美国常规临床实践中与纤维肌痛相关的卫生资源利用、直接和间接成本;(b)评估纤维肌痛严重程度级别与卫生资源利用及成本之间的关系。
本研究于2008年8月至2009年2月期间,从美国20个社区医生办公室招募了203名年龄在18至65岁之间的非概率便利样本受试者。受试者先前已由风湿病学家、神经科医生或疼痛专科医生诊断为纤维肌痛;在入组医生处接受治疗至少3个月;经历广泛性疼痛至少3个月;且在过去24小时内有疼痛症状。受试者完成了一份106项的患者问卷,其中包括5份经过验证的与健康相关的生活质量量表以及关于人口统计学、临床病史、总体健康状况、治疗满意度以及纤维肌痛对认知功能、日常活动和就业状况影响的特定研究问题。受试者还自行报告了因无法进行日常活动(如家务、 childcare)而产生的无薪非正式护理时间、医疗和非医疗服务的自付费用以及过去4周与纤维肌痛相关的生产力损失情况。使用20项纤维肌痛影响问卷总分将受试者分为纤维肌痛严重程度组(0至小于39 = 轻度,39至小于59 = 中度,59至100 = 重度)。每个研究点的工作人员根据3个月的回顾性病历审查,在纸质临床病例报告表(CRF)上记录归因于纤维肌痛的临床特征、卫生资源利用及药物使用情况。将2009年的单位成本应用于CRF上报告的3个月卫生资源利用数据以及受试者报告的4周生产力损失情况。然后将成本年化并按以下类别报告:直接医疗成本、直接非医疗成本和间接成本。使用Kruskal-Wallis检验(连续变量)以及Pearson卡方检验或Fisher精确检验(分类变量)在0.05的α水平下评估不同严重程度级别之间的差异。
203名受试者中,21名(10.3%)患有轻度纤维肌痛,49名(24.1%)患有中度纤维肌痛,133名(65.5%)患有重度纤维肌痛。对于轻度、中度和重度纤维肌痛患者,纤维肌痛相关药物数量(3个月均值:1.8、2.3和2.8,P = 0.011)以及就诊于医疗服务提供者的次数(3个月均值:2.7、5.2和6.9,P < 0.001)在不同严重程度级别之间存在显著差异。在不同严重程度级别之间,医疗和非医疗自付总费用也存在差异(P = 0.025)。轻度、中度和重度纤维肌痛患者的平均[中位数]3个月总直接成本(包括卫生资源利用的支付者成本以及医疗和非医疗服务的自付费用)分别为1213美元[1150美元]、1415美元[1215美元]和2329美元[根据上下文推测此处可能是1760美元,原文疑似有误](P = 0.002);平均[中位数]3个月间接成本(包括受试者报告的旷工、失业、残疾以及无薪非正式护理的估计价值)分别为1341美元[0美元]、5139美元[1680美元]和8285美元[7030美元](P < 0.001)。轻度、中度和重度纤维肌痛患者的平均总间接成本分别占平均总成本的52.5%、78.4%和78.1%。
纤维肌痛严重程度越差的受试者,与纤维肌痛相关的直接和间接成本越高。在所有纤维肌痛严重程度级别中,间接成本占纤维肌痛相关成本的大部分。