Wagner Christoph J, Metzger Florian G, Sievers Christoph, Marschall Ursula, L'hoest Helmut, Stollenwerk Bjoern, Stock Stephanie
Institute for Health Economics and Clinical Epidemiology, Cologne University Hospital, Germany.
Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy and Geriatric Center, Tuebingen University Hospital, Germany.
J Affect Disord. 2016 Mar 15;193:257-66. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2015.12.068. Epub 2016 Jan 2.
Existing diverse bottom-up estimations of direct costs associated with depression in Germany motivated a detailed patient-level analysis of depression-related treatment (DRT), -costs (DRC) and Comorbidity.
A large sickness fund's claims data was used to retrospectively identify patients aged 18-65 years with new-onset depression treatment between January 1st and February 15th 2010, and follow them until December 31st 2010, describe DRT, estimate associated DRC, and predict DRC with a generalised linear model.
A total of 18,139 patients were analysed. Mean direct DRC were €783. Predictors of DRC regarding psychiatric comorbidities were: "Delusion, psychotic disorders and personality disorders" (DRC-ratio 1.72), "Alcohol/drug addiction" (1.82), "abuse of alcohol/drugs" (1.57). Predictors of DRC regarding medical comorbidities were: "Rheumatoid arthritis" (0.77), "atherosclerosis" (0.65), "pregnancy" (0.66), and "Osteoarthritis" (1.87). Of all patients, 60.8% received their most intense/specialised DRT from a general practitioner, a medical specialist (23.7%), a psychotherapist (8.0%), a medical specialist and psychotherapist (2.9%), or in hospital (4.6%). Serious psychiatric comorbidity nearly tripled depression-related hospitalisation rates.
Seasonal affective disorder and missing psychiatric outpatient clinic data must be considered.
Estimated DRC are significantly below the assessment of the German national guideline. Differing definitions of observation period and cost attribution might explain differing German DRC results. Signs of hospital psychiatric comorbidity bias indicate overestimation of hospital DRC. Identified associations of DRC with certain medical diseases in older adults warrant further research. Up to one quarter of patients with severe depression diagnosis might lack specialist treatment.
德国现有的对抑郁症相关直接成本的各种自下而上的估计促使对抑郁症相关治疗(DRT)、成本(DRC)和合并症进行详细的患者层面分析。
使用一个大型疾病基金的理赔数据,回顾性识别2010年1月1日至2月15日期间开始接受抑郁症治疗的18至65岁患者,并跟踪至2010年12月31日,描述DRT,估计相关DRC,并使用广义线性模型预测DRC。
共分析了18139名患者。平均直接DRC为783欧元。与精神科合并症相关的DRC预测因素为:“妄想、精神障碍和人格障碍”(DRC比率1.72)、“酒精/药物成瘾”(1.82)、“酒精/药物滥用”(1.57)。与内科合并症相关的DRC预测因素为:“类风湿性关节炎”(0.77)、“动脉粥样硬化”(0.65)、“怀孕”(0.66)和“骨关节炎”(1.87)。在所有患者中,60.8%的患者从全科医生、医学专科医生(23.7%)、心理治疗师(8.0%)、医学专科医生和心理治疗师(2.9%)或住院治疗(4.6%)中接受了最强化/专业化的DRT。严重的精神科合并症使抑郁症相关住院率增加了近两倍。
必须考虑季节性情感障碍和精神科门诊缺失数据。
估计的DRC显著低于德国国家指南的评估。观察期和成本归属的不同定义可能解释了德国不同的DRC结果。医院精神科合并症偏差的迹象表明对医院DRC的高估。已确定的DRC与老年人某些内科疾病的关联值得进一步研究。高达四分之一的重度抑郁症诊断患者可能缺乏专科治疗。