Bartsch S M, McKinnell J A, Mueller L E, Miller L G, Gohil S K, Huang S S, Lee B Y
Public Health Computational and Operations Research (PHICOR), Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Infectious Disease Clinical Outcomes Research Unit (ID-CORE), Los Angeles Biomedical Research Institute, Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, Torrance, CA, USA; Torrance Memorial Medical Center, Torrance, CA, USA.
Clin Microbiol Infect. 2017 Jan;23(1):48.e9-48.e16. doi: 10.1016/j.cmi.2016.09.003. Epub 2016 Sep 15.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention considers carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE) an urgent public health threat; however, its economic burden is unknown.
We developed a CRE clinical and economics outcomes model to determine the cost of CRE infection from the hospital, third-party payer, and societal, perspectives and to evaluate the health and economic burden of CRE to the USA.
Depending on the infection type, the median cost of a single CRE infection can range from $22 484 to $66 031 for hospitals, $10 440 to $31 621 for third-party payers, and $37 778 to $83 512 for society. An infection incidence of 2.93 per 100 000 population in the USA (9418 infections) would cost hospitals $275 million (95% CR $217-334 million), third-party payers $147 million (95% CR $129-172 million), and society $553 million (95% CR $303-1593 million) with a 25% attributable mortality, and would result in the loss of 8841 (95% CR 5805-12 420) quality-adjusted life years. An incidence of 15 per 100 000 (48 213 infections) would cost hospitals $1.4 billion (95% CR $1.1-1.7 billion), third-party payers $0.8 billion (95% CR $0.6-0.8 billion), and society $2.8 billion (95% CR $1.6-8.2 billion), and result in the loss of 45 261 quality-adjusted life years.
The cost of CRE is higher than the annual cost of many chronic diseases and of many acute diseases. Costs rise proportionally with the incidence of CRE, increasing by 2.0 times, 3.4 times, and 5.1 times for incidence rates of 6, 10, and 15 per 100 000 persons.
美国疾病控制与预防中心认为耐碳青霉烯类肠杆菌科细菌(CRE)对公众健康构成紧迫威胁;然而,其经济负担尚不清楚。
我们建立了一个CRE临床和经济结果模型,以确定医院、第三方支付方和社会层面CRE感染的成本,并评估CRE给美国带来的健康和经济负担。
根据感染类型,单次CRE感染的中位数成本,医院层面为22484美元至66031美元,第三方支付方为10440美元至31621美元,社会层面为37778美元至83512美元。在美国,每10万人中感染发生率为2.93(9418例感染)时,医院成本为2.75亿美元(95%置信区间2.17亿 - 3.34亿美元),第三方支付方为1.47亿美元(95%置信区间1.29亿 - 1.72亿美元),社会成本为5.53亿美元(95%置信区间3.03亿 - 15.93亿美元),归因死亡率为25%,并导致8841个(95%置信区间5805 - 12420个)质量调整生命年的损失。每10万人中感染发生率为十五(48213例感染)时,医院成本为14亿美元(95%置信区间11亿 - 17亿美元),第三方支付方为8亿美元(95%置信区间6亿 - 8亿美元),社会成本为28亿美元(95%置信区间16亿 - 82亿美元),并导致45261个质量调整生命年的损失。
CRE的成本高于许多慢性病和许多急性病的年度成本。成本随CRE的发生率成比例上升,每10万人发生率为6、10和15时,成本分别增加2.0倍、3.4倍和5.1倍。