Division of Infectious Diseases and Health Policy Research Institute, University of California Irvine School of Medicine, 100 Theory Ave, Suite 110, Irvine, CA 92697, USA.
Department of Population Medicine, Harvard Medical School and Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute, 133 Brookline Ave, 3rd Floor, Boston, MA 02215, USA ; Division of General Pediatrics, Boston Children's Hospital, 300 Longwood Ave, Hunnewell G, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
Antimicrob Resist Infect Control. 2014 May 21;3:16. doi: 10.1186/2047-2994-3-16. eCollection 2014.
The burden of disease due to S. pneumoniae (pneumococcus), particularly pneumonia, remains high despite the widespread use of vaccines. Drug resistant strains complicate clinical treatment and may increase costs. We estimated the annual burden and incremental costs attributable to antibiotic resistance in pneumococcal pneumonia.
We derived estimates of healthcare utilization and cost (in 2012 dollars) attributable to penicillin, erythromycin and fluoroquinolone resistance by taking the estimate of disease burden from a previously described decision tree model of pneumococcal pneumonia in the U.S. We analyzed model outputs assuming only the existence of susceptible strains and calculating the resulting differences in cost and utilization. We modeled the cost of resistance from delayed resolution of illness and the resulting additional health services.
Our model estimated that non-susceptibility to penicillin, erythromycin and fluoroquinolones directly caused 32,398 additional outpatient visits and 19,336 hospitalizations for pneumococcal pneumonia. The incremental cost of antibiotic resistance was estimated to account for 4% ($91 million) of direct medical costs and 5% ($233 million) of total costs including work and productivity loss. Most of the incremental medical cost ($82 million) was related to hospitalizations resulting from erythromycin non-susceptibility. Among patients under age 18 years, erythromycin non-susceptibility was estimated to cause 17% of hospitalizations for pneumonia and $38 million in costs, or 39% of pneumococcal pneumonia costs attributable to resistance.
We estimate that antibiotic resistance in pneumococcal pneumonia leads to substantial healthcare utilization and cost, with more than one-third driven by macrolide resistance in children. With 5% of total pneumococcal costs directly attributable to resistance, strategies to reduce antibiotic resistance or improve antibiotic selection could lead to substantial savings.
尽管广泛使用疫苗,但肺炎球菌(肺炎链球菌)引起的疾病负担仍然很高,特别是肺炎。耐药菌株使临床治疗变得复杂,并可能增加成本。我们估计了肺炎球菌性肺炎中抗生素耐药性引起的年度负担和增量成本。
我们从之前描述的美国肺炎链球菌性肺炎决策树模型中获得了与青霉素、红霉素和氟喹诺酮耐药相关的医疗保健利用和成本(以 2012 年美元计算)的估计值。我们通过假设仅存在敏感株并计算成本和利用的差异来分析模型输出。我们从疾病缓解延迟建模耐药性的成本以及由此产生的额外卫生服务成本。
我们的模型估计,青霉素、红霉素和氟喹诺酮的非敏感性直接导致 32398 例额外的门诊就诊和 19336 例肺炎球菌性肺炎住院治疗。抗生素耐药性的增量成本估计占直接医疗费用的 4%(9100 万美元)和包括工作和生产力损失在内的总费用的 5%(2.33 亿美元)。增量医疗成本的大部分(8200 万美元)与红霉素不敏感导致的住院有关。在 18 岁以下的患者中,红霉素不敏感估计导致 17%的肺炎住院和 3800 万美元的费用,占耐药性引起的肺炎球菌性肺炎费用的 39%。
我们估计肺炎球菌性肺炎中的抗生素耐药性导致大量的医疗保健利用和成本,其中超过三分之一是由儿童大环内酯类耐药引起的。由于 5%的总肺炎球菌成本直接归因于耐药性,因此减少抗生素耐药性或改善抗生素选择的策略可能会带来大量节省。