Kraus Michael R, Kleine Henning, Thönnes Stefanie, Pignot Marc, Sanchez Gonzalez Yuri
Department of Internal Medicine II, Academic Hospital Altötting-Burghausen, Burghausen, Germany.
AbbVie Deutschland GmbH & Co. KG, Wiesbaden, Germany.
Infect Dis Ther. 2018 Sep;7(3):327-338. doi: 10.1007/s40121-018-0204-3. Epub 2018 Jun 19.
German data regarding the burden of complications from chronic hepatitis C (CHC) virus infection are limited. To address this issue, this study evaluates the clinical and economic burden of hepatic and extrahepatic complications (EHCs) associated with CHC in Germany.
This retrospective, cross-sectional study used claims data from the Betriebskrankenkasse German sickness fund (2007-2014) to assess the risks and medical costs of hepatic complications and EHCs, including conditions that are prevalent and behavioral factors associated with CHC. Prevalence, incidence, and risks were calculated for 1:1 matched patients with and without CHC (n = 3994). All-cause cost, medical costs related to hepatic and EHCs, as well as CHC-related and non-CHC-related pharmacy costs (adjusted to the 2016 Euro rate), were calculated and compared between 1:5 matched patients with (n = 8425) and without CHC (n = 42,125).
Patients with CHC had a 3-fold higher risk for any EHC (OR = 3.0; P < 0.05) and higher EHC-related medical costs (adjusted difference, €1606; P < 0.01) compared with patients without CHC. Total costs (€10,108 vs. €5430), hepatic complication-related medical costs (€1425 vs. €556), EHC-related costs (€3547 vs. €1921), CHC-related pharmacy costs (€577 vs. €116), and non-CHC-related pharmacy costs (€3719 vs. €1479) were all significantly greater for patients with CHC compared with patients without CHC. EHC-related medical costs were a major contributor to the higher all-cause medical (84.4%) and total (44.3%) cost differences between patients with CHC and the matched sample of patients without CHC.
CHC is associated with substantial clinical and economic burden in Germany, largely due to hepatic complications and EHCs.
Abbvie Inc.
德国关于慢性丙型肝炎(CHC)病毒感染并发症负担的数据有限。为解决这一问题,本研究评估了德国CHC相关的肝脏及肝外并发症(EHC)的临床和经济负担。
这项回顾性横断面研究使用了德国企业健康保险基金(2007 - 2014年)的理赔数据,以评估肝脏并发症和EHC的风险及医疗费用,包括常见疾病以及与CHC相关的行为因素。对1:1匹配的CHC患者和非CHC患者(n = 3994)计算患病率、发病率和风险。对1:5匹配的CHC患者(n = 8425)和非CHC患者(n = 42125)计算全因成本、与肝脏及EHC相关的医疗成本,以及与CHC相关和非CHC相关的药房成本(按2016年欧元汇率调整),并进行比较。
与非CHC患者相比,CHC患者发生任何EHC的风险高3倍(OR = 3.0;P < 0.05),且与EHC相关的医疗成本更高(调整差异为1606欧元;P < 0.01)。CHC患者的总成本(10108欧元对5430欧元)、与肝脏并发症相关的医疗成本(1425欧元对556欧元)、与EHC相关的成本(3547欧元对1921欧元)、与CHC相关的药房成本(577欧元对116欧元)以及与非CHC相关的药房成本(3719欧元对1479欧元)均显著高于非CHC患者。与EHC相关的医疗成本是CHC患者与匹配的非CHC患者样本之间全因医疗成本(84.4%)和总成本(44.3%)差异较高的主要原因。
在德国,CHC与巨大的临床和经济负担相关,主要归因于肝脏并发症和EHC。
艾伯维公司