Impact of rifaximin use following an initial overt hepatic encephalopathy hospitalization on rehospitalization and costs

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Abstract

Aim: To assess the impact of rifaximin (± lactulose) use following discharge of an initial overt hepatic encephalopathy (OHE) hospitalization on OHE rehospitalizations and healthcare costs in a real-world setting. Methods: Adults (18–64 years) with an OHE hospitalization were identified from MarketScan® Commercial claims (Q4′15–Q2′20), classified into two mutually exclusive treatment cohorts (i.e. rifaximin and no rifaximin treatment), and further stratified into four subgroups based on decreasing quality of care (QoC; i.e. Type 1–rifaximin without delay post-discharge; Type 2–rifaximin with delay post-discharge; Type 3–lactulose only post-discharge; Type 4–no rifaximin/lactulose treatment post-discharge). The impact of rifaximin use on 30-day and annualized OHE hospitalizations and healthcare costs were assessed between cohorts and by the QoC subgroup. Results: Characteristics were similar between the rifaximin (N = 1,452; Type 1: 1,138, Type 2: 314) and no rifaximin (N = 560; Type 3:337, Type 4: 223) treatment cohorts. The 30-day risk of OHE rehospitalization was lower for the rifaximin vs. no rifaximin treatment cohort (odds ratio 0.56, p

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Jesudian, A. B., Gagnon-Sanschagrin, P., Heimanson, Z., Bungay, R., Chen, J., Guérin, A., … Dashputre, A. A. (2023). Impact of rifaximin use following an initial overt hepatic encephalopathy hospitalization on rehospitalization and costs. Journal of Medical Economics, 26(1), 1169–1177. https://doi.org/10.1080/13696998.2023.2255074

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