Cohoon Kevin P, Ransom Jeanine E, Leibson Cynthia L, Ashrani Aneel A, Petterson Tanya M, Long Kirsten Hall, Bailey Kent R, Heit John A
Division of Cardiovascular Diseases and Gonda Vascular Center, Department of Internal Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn.
Division of Biomedical Statistics and Informatics, Department of Health Sciences Research, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn.
Am J Med. 2016 Sep;129(9):1000.e15-25. doi: 10.1016/j.amjmed.2016.02.030. Epub 2016 Mar 21.
The purpose of this study is to estimate medical costs attributable to venous thromboembolism among patients with active cancer.
In a population-based cohort study, we used Rochester Epidemiology Project (REP) resources to identify all Olmsted County, Minn. residents with incident venous thromboembolism and active cancer over the 18-year period, 1988-2005 (n = 374). One Olmsted County resident with active cancer without venous thromboembolism was matched to each case on age, sex, cancer diagnosis date, and duration of prior medical history. Subjects were followed forward in REP provider-linked billing data for standardized, inflation-adjusted direct medical costs from 1 year prior to index (venous thromboembolism event date or control-matched date) to the earliest of death, emigration from Olmsted County, or December 31, 2011, with censoring on the shortest follow-up to ensure a similar follow-up duration for each case-control pair. We used generalized linear modeling to predict costs for cases and controls and bootstrapping methods to assess uncertainty and significance of mean adjusted cost differences. Outpatient drug costs were not included in our estimates.
Adjusted mean predicted costs were 1.9-fold higher for cases ($49,351) than for controls ($26,529) (P < .001) from index to up to 5 years post index. Cost differences between cases and controls were greatest within the first 3 months (mean difference = $13,504) and remained significantly higher from 3 months to 5 years post index (mean difference = $12,939).
Venous thromboembolism-attributable costs among patients with active cancer contribute a substantial economic burden and are highest from index to 3 months, but may persist for up to 5 years.
本研究旨在估算活动性癌症患者中静脉血栓栓塞所致的医疗费用。
在一项基于人群的队列研究中,我们利用罗切斯特流行病学项目(REP)的资源,确定了1988年至2005年这18年间明尼苏达州奥尔姆斯特德县所有患有静脉血栓栓塞和活动性癌症的居民(n = 374)。将一名患有活动性癌症但无静脉血栓栓塞的奥尔姆斯特德县居民与每例患者按年龄、性别、癌症诊断日期和既往病史时长进行匹配。利用REP中与医疗服务提供者相关的计费数据,对研究对象进行随访,以获取从索引日期(静脉血栓栓塞事件日期或对照匹配日期)前1年到最早出现死亡、从奥尔姆斯特德县迁出或2011年12月31日期间经过标准化、通胀调整后的直接医疗费用,并对最短随访期进行删失处理,以确保每个病例对照对的随访期相似。我们使用广义线性模型预测病例和对照的费用,并采用自抽样法评估平均调整后费用差异的不确定性和显著性。我们的估算未包括门诊药物费用。
从索引日期到索引日期后长达5年,病例的调整后平均预测费用(49,351美元)比对照(26,529美元)高1.9倍(P <.001)。病例与对照之间的费用差异在最初3个月内最大(平均差异 = 13,504美元),并且在索引日期后3个月至5年期间仍显著更高(平均差异 = 12,939美元)。
活动性癌症患者中静脉血栓栓塞所致的费用造成了巨大的经济负担,在索引日期到3个月期间最高,但可能持续长达5年。