Healthcare resource use and cost associated with varying dosages of extended corticosteroid exposure in a US population

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Abstract

Aims: To quantify healthcare resource use (HCRU) and costs associated with varying levels of corticosteroid exposure. Materials and methods: Patients with a diagnosis of selected autoimmune and inflammatory diseases between 1 January 2006 and 30 September 2015 (“study period”) were selected from a de-identified, privately-insured claims database. Patients were stratified into four treatment cohorts based on the dosing and duration of continuous corticosteroid use following disease diagnosis: intermittent use with <60 days of corticosteroid use and ≥60 days of corticosteroid use with low (≤7.5 mg/day), medium (>7.5–≤15 mg/day), or high (>15 mg/day) dosage. Patients were followed from the date of their highest dose episode of corticosteroid use (“treatment index date”) until the earliest of the end of continuous corticosteroid use +30 days, disenrollment from health plan, or the end of the study period (“follow-up period”). HCRU and costs in the follow-up period were compared across treatment cohorts. Results: Of 78,704 patients who were identified for study inclusion, 29% had extended corticosteroid use lasting ≥60 days, and 71% had intermittent use. On average, patients in the high-dose cohort incurred twice the cost of intermittent users ($68,408 vs $32,690 in annualized total all-cause healthcare costs, USD). Adverse event-related medical costs accounted for ∼40% of medical costs, and were higher than disease-related medical costs for all cohorts with extended corticosteroid exposure. Comparing the high-dose and low-dose cohorts, the smaller savings in disease-related prescriptions ($1,680) occurred along with a much larger cost in adverse event-related spend ($13,464). Limitations: The impact of corticosteroids may be under-estimated because of conservative follow-up duration, and administrative data may contain inaccuracies in coding. Conclusions: Steroid use, especially at higher doses, is associated with higher HCRU and costs.

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Rice, J. B., White, A. G., Johnson, M., Wagh, A., Qin, Y., Bartels-Peculis, L., … Nelson, W. W. (2018). Healthcare resource use and cost associated with varying dosages of extended corticosteroid exposure in a US population. Journal of Medical Economics, 21(9), 846–852. https://doi.org/10.1080/13696998.2018.1474750

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