Frankfurt School of Finance & Management, Frankfurt, Germany.
Fresenius Medical Care Deutschland GmbH, Bad Homburg v.d.H., Germany.
PLoS One. 2020 Apr 24;15(4):e0231375. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0231375. eCollection 2020.
This study aimed to determine the costs and distribution of healthcare spending of patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) at stages 3 and 4 and on dialysis both at the individual and population level in Germany.
The study took the perspective of the German statutory health insurance (SHI) system and analyzed claims data on 3,687,015 insurees from the year 2014. To extrapolate costs to the whole SHI population, a literature search on the prevalence of CKD was conducted.
Average costs per person per year in an age- and gender-matched control group of the normal population were €2,876 (95% confidence interval [CI], €2,798 to €2,955) and ≥2.8-fold higher in CKD patients (€8,030 [95% CI, €7,848 to €8,212] at CKD stage 3, €9,760 [95% CI, €9,266 to €10,255] at CKD stage 4, and €44,374 [95% CI, €43,608 to €45,139] on dialysis). At CKD stages 3 and 4 the major cost driver was hospitalizations, contributing to more than 50% of total expenditures. Among dialysis patients, hospitalizations and dialysis-treatment costs contributed to 23% and 53% of total healthcare spending, respectively. At CKD stages 3 and 4, patients with the highest 20% of healthcare spending showed a considerable increase in per-patient costs over the reference population, while the bottom 80% of patients generated only moderately higher per-patient costs (p < 0.001). Comparing total CKD costs to total SHI expenditures yields that 10.2% of SHI expenditures was driven by patients at CKD stages 3 and 4 and 1.6% by dialysis patients.
Healthcare spending of patients with CKD at stages 3 and 4 and on dialysis is concentrated among a small number of high-need patients. As hospitalizations and dialysis treatment are key drivers of total expenditures, strategies that lead to a reduction in hospitalizations, delay in dialysis onset, or increase in the availability of kidney donors should become important considerations by policymakers.
本研究旨在确定德国 3 期和 4 期慢性肾脏病(CKD)患者以及透析患者的个人和人群层面的医疗保健支出的成本和分布。
本研究从德国法定健康保险(SHI)系统的角度出发,分析了 2014 年 3687015 名参保人的索赔数据。为了将成本外推到整个 SHI 人群,对 CKD 的患病率进行了文献检索。
在正常人群的年龄和性别匹配对照组中,每人每年的平均费用为 2876 欧元(95%置信区间[CI],2798 至 2955 欧元),而 CKD 患者的费用高出 2.8 倍(CKD 3 期为 8030 欧元[95%CI,7848 至 8212 欧元],CKD 4 期为 9760 欧元[95%CI,9266 至 10255 欧元],透析患者为 44374 欧元[95%CI,43608 至 45139 欧元])。在 CKD 3 期和 4 期,主要的成本驱动因素是住院治疗,占总支出的 50%以上。在透析患者中,住院和透析治疗费用分别占总医疗保健支出的 23%和 53%。在 CKD 3 期和 4 期,医疗保健支出最高的 20%的患者的人均费用相对于参考人群有显著增加,而 80%的最低患者的人均费用仅略有增加(p<0.001)。将 CKD 的总费用与 SHI 的总支出进行比较,结果表明,3 期和 4 期 CKD 患者和透析患者的支出占 SHI 支出的 10.2%,而透析患者的支出占 1.6%。
CKD 3 期和 4 期以及透析患者的医疗保健支出集中在少数高需求患者中。由于住院治疗和透析治疗是总支出的主要驱动因素,因此减少住院治疗、延迟透析开始或增加肾脏供体的可用性的策略应该成为政策制定者的重要考虑因素。