1 Department of Pharmacy Practice and Administration, Western University of Health Sciences, Pomona, California.
2 Department of Research and Evaluation, Kaiser Permanente Southern California, Pasadena.
J Manag Care Spec Pharm. 2019 Apr;25(4):469-477. doi: 10.18553/jmcp.2019.25.4.469.
Anticyclic citrullinated peptide (anti-CCP) positivity may be a strong predictor of joint erosion and a potential biomarker for guiding treatment decisions for rheumatoid arthritis (RA). However, limited studies are currently available on the effect of anti-CCP positivity on health care utilization and/or medical costs of RA patients.
To investigate short-term and long-term direct health care expenditures associated with anti-CCP positivity in newly diagnosed RA patients.
A retrospective cohort study was conducted in adult RA patients within a U.S. integrated health care delivery system (January 1, 2007-June 30, 2015). Patients were required to have 2 RA diagnoses and treatment with a conventional or biologic disease-modifying antirheumatic drug (DMARD) within 12 months. The first RA diagnosis date was labeled as the index date, and patients were followed until they left the health plan, died, or reached the end of the study period. Patient demographics, anti-CCP results, comorbid conditions, and health care resource utilization during baseline (12 months before the index date) and follow-up periods were collected. Nationally recognized direct medical costs were assigned to health care utilization to calculate health care costs in 2015 U.S. dollars. The baseline differences between anti-CCP positivity and negativity and differences in censoring during follow-up were addressed using propensity scores. The mean differences in costs were estimated using recycled prediction methods.
2,448 newly diagnosed RA patients were identified and followed for a median of 3.7 years (range = 1-8 years). At baseline, 65.8% of patients were anti-CCP positive. Anti-CCP-positive patients had fewer comorbid conditions at baseline. During the first 12 months of follow-up, median (interquartile range) total health care expenditures for anti-CCP-positive and anti-CCP-negative patients were $6,200 ($3,563-$13,260) and $7,022 ($3,885-$12,995), respectively. After adjusting for baseline differences, total incremental mean cost associated with anti-CCP positivity during the first 12 months was estimated to be $2,163 per patient (P = 0.001). The annual incremental costs in anti-CCP-positive patients became progressively larger over time, from $2,163 during the first year to $5,062 during the fourth year. Anti-CCP positivity was associated with higher prescription, laboratory testing, and rheumatologist utilization. A higher percentage of anti-CCP-positive patients received 1 or more biologic DMARDs (11.6% for anti-CCP-positive vs. 5.7% for anti-CCP negative; P < 0.001) compared with anti-CCP-negative patients during the 12-month follow-up, which resulted in $2,499 in incremental prescription costs (P < 0.001). Total additional burden associated with anti-CCP positivity during the first 4 years was estimated to be $14,089 per patient.
In newly diagnosed RA patients, higher economic burden associated with anti-CCP positivity was mainly driven by prescription costs.
This research and manuscript were funded by Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMS). Alemao and Connolly are employees and shareholders of BMS and participated in the design of the study, interpretation of the data, review/revision of the manuscript, and approval of the final version of the manuscript. An and Cheetham received a grant from BMS for this research. At the time of this study, An was employed by Western University of Health Sciences, and Cheetham was employed by Kaiser Permanente Southern California. Bider-Canfield, Kang, and Lin have nothing to disclose. Some study results were presented as a poster at the American College of Rheumatology Annual Meeting; November 5, 2017; San Diego, CA, and at the International Society for Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes Research Meeting; May 19, 2018; Baltimore, MD.
抗环瓜氨酸肽(anti-CCP)阳性可能是关节侵蚀的强有力预测因子,也是指导类风湿关节炎(RA)治疗决策的潜在生物标志物。然而,目前关于抗 CCP 阳性对 RA 患者的医疗保健利用和/或医疗费用的影响的研究有限。
研究新诊断 RA 患者中与抗 CCP 阳性相关的短期和长期直接医疗保健支出。
在美国综合医疗保健提供系统中(2007 年 1 月 1 日至 2015 年 6 月 30 日)进行了一项新诊断 RA 患者的回顾性队列研究。患者必须有 2 次 RA 诊断和在 12 个月内接受常规或生物疾病修正抗风湿药物(DMARD)治疗。第一次 RA 诊断日期被标记为索引日期,患者在离开健康计划、死亡或达到研究期末之前一直随访。收集患者的人口统计学特征、抗 CCP 结果、合并症和基线(索引日期前 12 个月)和随访期间的医疗保健资源利用情况。将全国公认的直接医疗费用分配给医疗保健利用情况,以计算 2015 年美元的医疗保健费用。使用倾向评分解决基线时抗 CCP 阳性与阴性之间的差异和随访期间的差异。使用循环预测方法估计成本的平均值差异。
共确定了 2448 名新诊断的 RA 患者,中位随访时间为 3.7 年(范围为 1-8 年)。基线时,65.8%的患者为抗 CCP 阳性。抗 CCP 阳性患者在基线时的合并症较少。在随访的头 12 个月中,抗 CCP 阳性和抗 CCP 阴性患者的中位(四分位距)总医疗保健支出分别为 6200 美元(3563-13260 美元)和 7022 美元(3885-12995 美元)。在调整基线差异后,估计在头 12 个月内与抗 CCP 阳性相关的总增量平均费用为每位患者 2163 美元(P=0.001)。抗 CCP 阳性患者的年度增量成本随着时间的推移而逐渐增加,从第 1 年的 2163 美元增加到第 4 年的 5062 美元。抗 CCP 阳性与处方、实验室检测和风湿病学家的利用增加有关。在 12 个月的随访期间,抗 CCP 阳性患者接受 1 种或多种生物 DMARD 的比例较高(抗 CCP 阳性为 11.6%,抗 CCP 阴性为 5.7%;P<0.001),与抗 CCP 阴性患者相比,这导致处方费用增加了 2499 美元(P<0.001)。在头 4 年中,与抗 CCP 阳性相关的总额外负担估计为每位患者 14089 美元。
在新诊断的 RA 患者中,与抗 CCP 阳性相关的更高经济负担主要由处方费用驱动。
这项研究和手稿由 Bristol-Myers Squibb(BMS)资助。Alemao 和 Connolly 是 BMS 的员工和股东,参与了研究的设计、数据的解释、手稿的审查/修订以及最终版本的批准。An 和 Cheetham 从 BMS 获得了这项研究的资助。在这项研究时,An 受雇于 Western University of Health Sciences,而 Cheetham 受雇于 Kaiser Permanente Southern California。Bider-Canfield、Kang 和 Lin 没有什么可披露的。一些研究结果作为海报在美国风湿病学会年会展示;2017 年 11 月 5 日;圣地亚哥,CA 和国际药物经济学和结果研究学会会议;2018 年 5 月 19 日;巴尔的摩,MD。