Outcomes and Health Care Service Use in Adults 50 Years or Older With and Without Multiple Sclerosis: A 6-Year Observational Analysis

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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Multiple sclerosis (MS) typically presents in young adulthood. Recent data show the highest prevalence of MS in people aged 55 to 64 years; however, there are limited studies of this population. METHODS: Administrative US claims data from IBM-Truven MarketScan commercial and Medicare databases (2011-2017) were analyzed. People with MS 50 years or older were assigned to the aging MS cohort (n = 10,746). The matched controls were people 50 years or older without MS (n = 10,746). Multivariable models compared outcomes between groups. RESULTS: Infections were more frequent in the aging MS cohort vs matched controls (61% vs 45%; P

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Freeman, L., Lucas, A., Zhou, J., Hayward, B., Gough, M., & Livingston, T. (2023). Outcomes and Health Care Service Use in Adults 50 Years or Older With and Without Multiple Sclerosis: A 6-Year Observational Analysis. International Journal of MS Care, 25(2), 56–62. https://doi.org/10.7224/1537-2073.2021-124

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