Perelman School of Medicine and the Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2012 Oct 31;12:379. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-12-379.
Adults with certain comorbid conditions have a higher risk of pneumonia than the overall population. If treatment of pneumonia is more costly in certain predictable situations, this would affect the value proposition of populations for pneumonia prevention. We estimate the economic impact of community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) for adults with asthma, diabetes, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and congestive heart failure (CHF) in a large U.S. commercially-insured working age population.
Data sources consisted of 2003 through 2007 Thomson Reuters MarketScan Commercial Claims and Encounters and Thomson Reuters Health Productivity and Management (HPM) databases. Pneumonia episodes and selected comorbidities were identified by ICD-9-CM diagnosis codes. By propensity score matching, controls were identified for pneumonia patients. Excess direct medical costs and excess productivity cost were estimated by generalized linear models (GLM).
We identified 402,831 patients with CAP between 2003 through 2007, with 25,560, 32,677, 16,343, and 5,062 episodes occurring in patients with asthma, diabetes, COPD and CHF, respectively. Mean excess costs (and standard error, SE) of CAP were $14,429 (SE=44) overall. Mean excess costs by comorbidity subgroup were lowest for asthma ($13,307 (SE=123)), followed by diabetes ($21,395 (SE=171)) and COPD ($23,493 (SE=197)); mean excess costs were highest for patients with CHF ($34,436 (SE=549)). On average, indirect costs comprised 21% of total excess costs, ranging from 8% for CHF patients to 27% for COPD patients.
Compared to patients without asthma, diabetes, COPD, or CHF, the excess cost of CAP is nearly twice as high for patients with diabetes and COPD and nearly three times as high for patients with CHF. Indirect costs made up a significant but varying portion of excess CAP costs. Returns on prevention of pneumonia would therefore be higher in adults with these comorbidities.
某些合并症的成年人患肺炎的风险高于总体人群。如果肺炎的治疗在某些可预测的情况下成本更高,这将影响肺炎预防对人群的价值主张。我们在一个大型美国商业保险工作年龄人群中估计了社区获得性肺炎 (CAP) 对哮喘、糖尿病、慢性阻塞性肺疾病 (COPD) 和充血性心力衰竭 (CHF) 成年人的经济影响。
数据来源包括 2003 年至 2007 年汤姆森路透市场扫描商业索赔和遭遇以及汤姆森路透健康生产力和管理 (HPM) 数据库。肺炎发作和选定的合并症通过 ICD-9-CM 诊断代码确定。通过倾向评分匹配,为肺炎患者确定了对照组。通过广义线性模型 (GLM) 估计超额直接医疗成本和超额生产力成本。
我们在 2003 年至 2007 年期间确定了 402,831 例 CAP 患者,其中哮喘、糖尿病、COPD 和 CHF 患者分别发生了 25,560、32,677、16,343 和 5,062 例 CAP 发作。CAP 的平均超额成本(和标准误差,SE)总体为 14,429(SE=44)美元。按合并症亚组划分的平均超额成本最低的是哮喘($13,307 (SE=123)),其次是糖尿病($21,395 (SE=171))和 COPD($23,493 (SE=197));CHF 患者的平均超额成本最高($34,436 (SE=549))。平均而言,间接成本占总超额成本的 21%,从 CHF 患者的 8%到 COPD 患者的 27%不等。
与没有哮喘、糖尿病、COPD 或 CHF 的患者相比,糖尿病和 COPD 患者的 CAP 超额成本几乎是哮喘患者的两倍,CHF 患者的 CAP 超额成本几乎是哮喘患者的三倍。间接成本构成了 CAP 超额成本的重要但不同的部分。因此,这些合并症成年人预防肺炎的回报将更高。