University of California, San Francisco.
Mallinckrodt Pharmaceuticals, Bedminster, New Jersey.
J Manag Care Spec Pharm. 2020 Mar;26(3):275-283. doi: 10.18553/jmcp.2020.26.3.275.
Lupus flares significantly contribute to health resource utilization and hospitalizations. Identification of flare activity may be hindered since validated assessment scales are rarely used in clinical practice and flare severity may fall below clinician-assessed thresholds. Therefore, patient-reported outcomes of lupus flare frequency are important assessment tools for lupus management.
To better understand the relationship between lupus flares as reported by persons with lupus and specific direct and indirect costs, including hospital admission, unplanned urgent care (UC)/emergency department (ED) visits, work productivity loss, and nonwork activity impairment.
In this cross-sectional analysis, persons with lupus were drawn from 2 enriched sampling sources. Data were collected via an online survey and included individuals with self-reported physician's diagnosis of systemic lupus erythematosus, skin or discoid lupus, or lupus nephritis. Respondents were asked the total number of hospitalizations and ED/UC visits for any reason and for lupus-related hospitalizations and ED/UC visits. Work productivity loss and nonwork activity impairment were measured via the Work Productivity and Activity Impairment - General Health scale. The sample was stratified into those with 0 flares, 1-3 flares, 4-6 flares, and 7 or more flares, with 0 flares used as the reference. Chi-square tests for trend and analyses of variance were used to evaluate differences among flare frequency groups. Multivariable regression modeling was conducted to evaluate the independent relationship of flare frequency to health care use and productivity loss.
We studied 1,288 survey respondents with known flare frequency in the past 12 months. Flare frequency increased with duration of illness. The mean number of lupus-related hospital admissions was significantly associated with increasing flare frequency for the total sample (F = 3.9; < 0.009). Compared to patients with no flare, those who reported flare activities had 1.72-3.13 times higher rates of hospitalizations. The mean number of lupus-related ED/UC visits were also found to be significantly associated with increasing flare frequency for the total sample (F = 23.4; < 0.001), and rates were increased by 6.98- to 16.12-fold for unplanned ED/UC visits depending on flare frequency. Rates of employment were significantly related to increasing flare frequency. With respect to work-related impairment, absenteeism increased with greater lupus flare frequency (F = 6.2; < 0.001), as did presenteeism (F = 31.5; < 0.001) and the combined value of total work productivity loss (F = 30.4; < 0.001). Mean work-related activity impairment was 12%-32% more among patients who reported flare activities compared to those who reported no flares.
Increased lupus-related flare frequency is associated with worsened patient outcomes as measured by increased hospitalizations, visits to the ED/UC, work productivity loss, and activity impairment. This association may be an important indicator of disease severity and resource burden and therefore suggests an unmet need among patients experiencing lupus-related flares.
This study was sponsored by Mallinckrodt Pharmaceuticals via grants to Vedanta Research and The Lupus Foundation of America. Katz received consulting fees from Vedanta Research, which received grant support from Mallinckrodt Pharmaceuticals to support data collection and analysis. Nelson and Connolly-Strong are employees of Mallinckrodt Pharmaceuticals and are stockholders in the company. Reed is an employee of Vedanta Research. Daly and Topf are employees of the Lupus Foundation of America, which received grant funding to support data collection. This study was a podium presentation at The American College of Rheumatology (ACR) Annual Meeting 2018; October 19-24, 2018; Chicago, IL.
狼疮发作显著增加了医疗资源的利用和住院率。由于很少在临床实践中使用经过验证的评估量表,并且发作的严重程度可能低于临床医生评估的阈值,因此,狼疮发作频率的患者报告结果是狼疮管理的重要评估工具。
更好地了解狼疮患者报告的狼疮发作与特定的直接和间接成本之间的关系,包括住院、非计划紧急护理 (UC)/急诊 (ED) 就诊、工作生产力损失和非工作活动障碍。
在这项横断面分析中,从 2 个丰富的采样来源中抽取了狼疮患者。通过在线调查收集数据,包括自我报告的医生诊断为系统性红斑狼疮、皮肤或盘状狼疮或狼疮性肾炎的个体。受访者被问及因任何原因住院和 ED/UC 就诊的总次数,以及狼疮相关的住院和 ED/UC 就诊次数。通过一般健康状况下的工作生产力和活动障碍量表来衡量工作生产力损失和非工作活动障碍。将样本分为无发作、1-3 次发作、4-6 次发作和 7 次或更多发作,以无发作作为参考。使用趋势卡方检验和方差分析来评估不同发作频率组之间的差异。进行多变量回归模型分析,以评估发作频率与医疗保健使用和生产力损失的独立关系。
我们研究了过去 12 个月内已知发作频率的 1,288 份调查受访者。随着疾病持续时间的增加,发作频率增加。在总样本中,狼疮相关住院次数的平均值与发作频率呈显著相关(F = 3.9;< 0.009)。与无发作患者相比,有发作活动的患者住院率高出 1.72-3.13 倍。对于总样本,狼疮相关 ED/UC 就诊次数的平均值也与发作频率呈显著相关(F = 23.4;< 0.001),并且根据发作频率,非计划 ED/UC 就诊的发生率增加了 6.98-16.12 倍。就业率与发作频率呈显著相关。就与工作相关的障碍而言,旷工随着狼疮发作频率的增加而增加(F = 6.2;< 0.001),与工作效率(F = 31.5;< 0.001)和总工作生产力损失(F = 30.4;< 0.001)的综合值也呈显著相关。与无发作患者相比,报告有发作活动的患者的工作相关活动障碍程度高 12%-32%。
增加的狼疮相关发作频率与增加的住院、ED/UC 就诊次数、工作生产力损失和活动障碍等患者结果恶化相关。这种关联可能是疾病严重程度和资源负担的重要指标,因此表明经历狼疮相关发作的患者存在未满足的需求。
这项研究由 Mallinckrodt Pharmaceuticals 赞助,通过拨款给 Vedanta Research 和美国狼疮基金会支持数据收集和分析。Katz 从 Vedanta Research 获得咨询费,Vedanta Research 从 Mallinckrodt Pharmaceuticals 获得资助以支持数据收集。Nelson 和 Connolly-Strong 是 Mallinckrodt Pharmaceuticals 的员工,是该公司的股东。Reed 是 Vedanta Research 的员工。Daly 和 Topf 是美国狼疮基金会的员工,该基金会获得了资助以支持数据收集。这项研究是在 2018 年美国风湿病学会(ACR)年会上进行了演讲;2018 年 10 月 19 日至 24 日;芝加哥,IL。