Burns Richeal, Leal Jose, Sullivan Richard, Luengo-Fernandez Ramon
Health Economics Research Centre, Nuffield Department of Population Health, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Health Economics Research Centre, Nuffield Department of Population Health, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Lancet Haematol. 2016 Aug;3(8):e362-70. doi: 10.1016/S2352-3026(16)30062-X. Epub 2016 Jul 22.
Malignant blood disorders are a leading contributor to cancer incidence and mortality across Europe. Despite their burden, no study has assessed the economic effect of blood cancers in Europe. We aimed to assess the economic burden of malignant blood disorders across the 28 countries in the European Union (EU), Iceland, Norway, and Switzerland.
Malignant blood disorder-related costs were estimated for 28 EU countries, Iceland, Norway, and Switzerland for 2012. Country-specific costs were estimated with aggregate data on morbidity, mortality, and health-care resource use obtained from international and national sources. Health-care costs were estimated from expenditure on primary, outpatient, emergency, inpatient care, and drugs. Costs of informal care and productivity losses due to morbidity and early death were also included. For countries in the EU, malignant blood disorders were compared with the economic burden of overall cancer.
Malignant blood disorders cost the 31 European countries €12 billion in 2012. Health-care cost €7·3 billion (62% of total costs), productivity losses cost €3·6 billion (30%), and informal care cost €1 billion (8%). For the EU countries, malignant blood disorders cost €6·8 billion (12%) of the total health-care expenditure on cancer (€57 billion), with this proportion being second only to breast cancer. In terms of total cancer costs in the EU (€143 billion), malignant blood disorders cost €12 billion (8%).
Malignant blood disorders represent a leading cause of death, health-care service use, and costs, not only to European health-care systems, but to society overall. Our results add to essential public health knowledge needed for effective national cancer-control planning and priorities for public research funding.
European Hematology Association.
恶性血液疾病是欧洲癌症发病率和死亡率的主要原因之一。尽管其负担沉重,但尚无研究评估欧洲血液癌症的经济影响。我们旨在评估欧盟28国、冰岛、挪威和瑞士恶性血液疾病的经济负担。
估计了2012年欧盟28国、冰岛、挪威和瑞士与恶性血液疾病相关的费用。利用从国际和国家来源获得的发病率、死亡率和医疗资源使用的汇总数据,估计了各国的具体费用。医疗费用根据初级、门诊、急诊、住院护理和药品支出进行估算。还包括非正式护理的费用以及发病和过早死亡导致的生产力损失。对于欧盟国家,将恶性血液疾病与总体癌症的经济负担进行了比较。
2012年,恶性血液疾病给31个欧洲国家造成了120亿欧元的损失。医疗费用为73亿欧元(占总费用的62%),生产力损失为36亿欧元(占30%),非正式护理费用为10亿欧元(占8%)。对于欧盟国家,恶性血液疾病的费用占癌症总医疗支出(570亿欧元)的68亿欧元(12%),这一比例仅次于乳腺癌。就欧盟的癌症总费用(1430亿欧元)而言,恶性血液疾病的费用为120亿欧元(8%)。
恶性血液疾病不仅是欧洲医疗系统,也是整个社会死亡、医疗服务使用和费用的主要原因之一。我们的研究结果为有效的国家癌症控制规划和公共研究资金的优先事项提供了重要的公共卫生知识。
欧洲血液学协会。