Cost of Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infections in US Infants: Systematic Literature Review and Analysis

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Abstract

Background: Limited data are available on the economic costs of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infections among infants and young children in the United States. Methods: We performed a systematic literature review of 10 key databases to identify studies published between 1 January 2014 and 2 August 2021 that reported RSV-related costs in US children aged 0-59 months. Costs were extracted and a systematic analysis was performed. Results: Seventeen studies were included. Although an RSV hospitalization (RSVH) of an extremely premature infant costs 5.6 times that of a full-term infant ($10 214), full-term infants accounted for 82% of RSVHs and 70% of RSVH costs. Medicaid-insured infants were 91% more likely than commercially insured infants to be hospitalized for RSV treatment in their first year of life. Medicaid financed 61% of infant RSVHs. Paying 32% less per hospitalization than commercial insurance, Medicaid paid 51% of infant RSVH costs. Infants' RSV treatment costs $709.6 million annually, representing $187 per overall birth and $227 per publicly funded birth. Conclusions: Public sources pay for more than half of infants' RSV medical costs, constituting the highest rate of RSVHs and the highest expenditure per birth. Full-term infants are the predominant source of infant RSVHs and costs.

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Bowser, D. M., Rowlands, K. R., Hariharan, D., Gervasio, R. M., Buckley, L., Halasa-Rappel, Y., … Shepard, D. S. (2022, August 15). Cost of Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infections in US Infants: Systematic Literature Review and Analysis. Journal of Infectious Diseases. Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/infdis/jiac172

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