Duff Steve, Mafilios Michael S, Bhounsule Prajakta, Hasegawa James T
Veritas Health Economics Consulting , Carlsbad, CA, USA.
Health Economics Associates , San Diego, CA, USA.
Vasc Health Risk Manag. 2019 Jul 1;15:187-208. doi: 10.2147/VHRM.S209241. eCollection 2019.
Peripheral arterial disease is a chronic vascular disease characterized by impaired circulation to the lower extremities. Its most severe stage, known as critical limb ischemia (CLI), puts patients at an increased risk of cardiovascular events, amputation, and death. The objective of this literature review is to describe the burden of disease across a comprehensive set of domains-epidemiologic, clinical, humanistic, and economic-focusing on key studies published in the last decade. CLI prevalence in the United States is estimated to be approximately 2 million and is likely to rise in the coming years given trends in important risk factors such as age, diabetes, and smoking. Hospitalization for CLI patients is common and up to 60% are readmitted within 6 months. Amputation rates are unacceptably high with a disproportionate risk for certain demographic and socioeconomic groups. In addition to limb loss, CLI patients also have reduced life expectancy with mortality typically exceeding 50% by 5 years. Given the poor clinical prognosis, it is unsurprising that the quality of life burden associated with CLI is significant. Studies assessing quality of life in CLI patients have used a variety of generic and disease-specific measures and all document a substantial impact of the disease on the patient's physical, social, and emotional health status compared to population norms. Finally, the poor clinical outcomes and increased medical resource use lead to a considerable economic burden for national health care systems. However, published cost studies are not comprehensive and, therefore, likely underestimate the true economic impact of CLI. Our summary documents a sobering assessment of CLI burden-a poor clinical prognosis translating into diminished quality of life and high costs for millions of patients. Continued prevention efforts and improved treatment strategies are the key to ameliorating the substantial morbidity and mortality associated with this disease.
外周动脉疾病是一种慢性血管疾病,其特征是下肢血液循环受损。其最严重阶段称为严重肢体缺血(CLI),会使患者发生心血管事件、截肢和死亡的风险增加。这篇文献综述的目的是描述过去十年发表的重点研究中,在一系列综合领域——流行病学、临床、人文和经济——中疾病的负担情况。据估计,美国CLI的患病率约为200万,鉴于年龄、糖尿病和吸烟等重要风险因素的趋势,未来几年患病率可能会上升。CLI患者住院很常见,高达60%的患者在6个月内再次入院。截肢率高得令人无法接受,某些人口统计学和社会经济群体面临的风险不成比例。除了肢体丧失,CLI患者的预期寿命也缩短,5年内死亡率通常超过50%。鉴于临床预后不佳,与CLI相关的生活质量负担很大也就不足为奇了。评估CLI患者生活质量的研究使用了各种通用和疾病特异性指标,所有这些指标都表明,与人群标准相比,该疾病对患者的身体、社会和情感健康状况有重大影响。最后,临床结果不佳和医疗资源使用增加给国家医疗保健系统带来了相当大的经济负担。然而,已发表的成本研究并不全面,因此可能低估了CLI的真正经济影响。我们的总结对CLI负担进行了严峻评估——临床预后不佳转化为生活质量下降和数百万患者的高成本。持续的预防努力和改进的治疗策略是改善与该疾病相关的大量发病率和死亡率的关键。