University of Pennsylvania, 1222 Blockley Hall, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
J Manag Care Spec Pharm. 2014 Apr;20(4):382-90. doi: 10.18553/jmcp.2014.20.4.382.
The prevalence of irritable bowel syndrome with constipation (IBS-C) is estimated to be between 4.3% and 5.2% among adults in the United States. Little is known about the health care resource utilization and costs associated with IBS-C.
To (a) evaluate the annual total all-cause, gastrointestinal (GI)-related, and IBS-C-related health care costs among IBS-C patients seeking medical care in a commercially insured population and (b) estimate the incremental all-cause health care costs among IBS-C patients relative to matched controls.
Patients aged ≥ 18 years with continuous medical and pharmacy benefit eligibility in 2010 were identified from the HealthCore Integrated Research Database, which consists of administrative claims from 14 geographically dispersed U.S. health plans representing 45 million lives. IBS-C patients were defined as those with ≥ 1 medical claim with an ICD-9-CM diagnosis code in any position for IBS (ICD-9-CM 564.1x) and either ≥ 2 medical claims for constipation (ICD-9-CM 564.0x) on different service dates or ≥ 1 medical claim for constipation plus ≥ 1 pharmacy claim for a constipation-related prescription on different dates of service during the study period. Controls were defined as patients without any medical claims for IBS, constipation, abdominal pain, or bloating or pharmacy claims for constipation-related prescriptions. Controls were randomly selected and matched with IBS-C patients in a 1:1 ratio based on age (± 4 years), gender, health plan region, and health plan type. Patients with diagnoses or prescriptions suggesting mixed IBS, IBS with diarrhea, chronic diarrhea, or drug-induced constipation were excluded. Total health care costs in 2010 U.S. dollars were defined as the sum of health plan and patient paid costs for prescriptions and medical services, including inpatient visits, emergency room (ER) visits, physician office visits, and other outpatient services. The total cost approach was used to assess total all-cause or disease-specific health care costs for patients with IBS-C, while the incremental cost approach was used to examine the excess all-cause costs of IBS-C by comparing IBS-C patients with matched controls. Generalized linear models with bootstrapping were used to assess the incremental all-cause costs attributable solely to IBS-C after adjusting for demographics, Elixhauser Comorbidity Index (ECI) score, and other general and GI-related comorbidities not included in the ECI score.
A total of 7,652 patients (n = 3,826 each in the IBS-C and control cohorts) were included in the analysis. The mean (± SD) age was 48 (± 17) years, and 83.6% were female. The mean annual all-cause health care costs for IBS-C patients were $11,182, with over half (53.7%) of the costs attributable to outpatient services, including physician office visits and other outpatient services (13.1% and 40.6%, respectively). Remaining total all-cause costs were attributable to hospitalizations (21.8%), prescriptions (19.1%), and ER visits (5.4%). GI-related costs ($4,456) comprised 39.8% of total all-cause costs, while IBS-C-related costs ($1,335) accounted for 11.9% and were primarily driven by costs of other outpatient services (50.3%). After adjusting for demographics and comorbidities, the incremental annual all-cause health care costs associated with IBS-C were $3,856 ($8,621 for IBS-C patients vs. $4,765 for controls, P less than 0.01) per patient per year, of which 78.1% of the incremental costs were due to medical services, and 21.9% were due to prescription fills.
IBS-C imposes a substantial economic burden in terms of direct health care costs in a commercially insured population. Compared with matched controls, IBS-C patients incurred significantly higher total annual all-cause health care costs even after controlling for general and GI-related comorbidities. Incremental all-cause costs associated with IBS-C were mainly driven by costs related to more frequent use of medical services as opposed to prescriptions.
在美国成年人中,肠易激综合征伴便秘(IBS-C)的患病率估计在 4.3%至 5.2%之间。对于与 IBS-C 相关的医疗保健资源利用和成本知之甚少。
(a)评估在商业保险人群中寻求医疗护理的 IBS-C 患者的年度全因、胃肠道(GI)相关和 IBS-C 相关医疗保健成本;(b)估计与匹配对照相比,IBS-C 患者的全因医疗保健成本增量。
从 HealthCore 综合研究数据库中确定了 2010 年连续有医疗和药房福利资格的年龄≥18 岁的患者,该数据库由来自 14 个地理位置分散的美国健康计划的行政索赔组成,代表了 4500 万生命。IBS-C 患者的定义为在研究期间的任何医疗索赔中 ICD-9-CM 诊断代码的任何位置至少有 1 次 IBS(ICD-9-CM 564.1x),并且在不同的服务日期有≥2 次医疗索赔用于便秘(ICD-9-CM 564.0x)或在不同的服务日期有≥1 次医疗索赔用于便秘加上≥1 次药房索赔用于便秘相关处方。对照组的定义为没有任何 IBS、便秘、腹痛或腹胀的医疗索赔或便秘相关处方的药房索赔的患者。对照组根据年龄(±4 岁)、性别、健康计划区域和健康计划类型,以 1:1 的比例随机选择并与 IBS-C 患者匹配。排除了诊断或处方提示混合 IBS、IBS 伴腹泻、慢性腹泻或药物引起的便秘的患者。2010 年的美元医疗保健费用总额定义为健康计划和患者支付的处方和医疗服务费用的总和,包括住院治疗、急诊室(ER)就诊、医生办公室就诊和其他门诊服务。总费用方法用于评估 IBS-C 患者的全因或疾病特异性医疗保健费用,而增量成本方法用于通过比较 IBS-C 患者与匹配对照来检查 IBS-C 的超额全因成本。使用带有引导的广义线性模型来调整人口统计学、Elixhauser 合并症指数(ECI)评分以及 ECI 评分中未包含的其他一般和 GI 相关合并症后,评估仅归因于 IBS-C 的增量全因成本。
共有 7652 名患者(n = 3826 名 IBS-C 患者和 3826 名对照组)纳入分析。患者的平均(±SD)年龄为 48(±17)岁,83.6%为女性。IBS-C 患者的平均年度全因医疗保健费用为 11182 美元,其中超过一半(53.7%)的费用归因于门诊服务,包括医生办公室就诊和其他门诊服务(分别为 13.1%和 40.6%)。其余的全因医疗费用归因于住院治疗(21.8%)、处方(19.1%)和急诊室就诊(5.4%)。与 GI 相关的费用(4456 美元)占全因费用的 39.8%,而与 IBS-C 相关的费用(1335 美元)占 11.9%,主要由其他门诊服务的费用驱动(50.3%)。在调整人口统计学和合并症后,IBS-C 相关的全因医疗保健成本增量为每年每位患者 3856 美元(IBS-C 患者为 8621 美元,对照组为 4765 美元,P 小于 0.01),其中 78.1%的增量成本归因于医疗服务,21.9%归因于处方。
在商业保险人群中,IBS-C 会对直接医疗保健成本造成重大经济负担。与匹配对照相比,即使在控制一般和 GI 相关合并症后,IBS-C 患者的全因年度医疗保健成本也明显更高。与 IBS-C 相关的增量全因成本主要是由于更频繁地使用医疗服务而不是处方导致的。