Incremental economic burden associated with major bleeding among atrial fibrillation patients treated with factor Xa inhibitors

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Abstract

Objective: To evaluate healthcare resource use and costs incurred during, as well as following hospitalization for major bleeding (MB), among atrial fibrillation (AF) patients treated with factor Xa inhibitors Methods: Patients with an AF diagnosis and MB hospitalization (index event) were identified from the MarketScan Commercial and Medicare databases (January 1, 2011–December 31, 2014). Patients were required to have ≥1 prescription for rivaroxaban or apixaban within 3 months prior to MB hospitalization. AF patients treated with Xa inhibitors, but who did not have any diagnosis of MB during the study period were identified. Hospital resource use and costs were evaluated for index MB hospitalizations. Healthcare resource use and associated costs were also evaluated for up to 12 months and compared between AF patients with and without MB. Results: Of the overall patient population with AF treated with factor Xa inhibitors (n = 92,949), 3,081 (3.3%) were identified as patients with MB and 89,868 without MB. The mean hospital length of stay and hospital cost for index MB hospitalizations were 5.3 days and $28,059, respectively. Total all-cause healthcare costs were higher during the 12 months of follow-up for AF patients with MB vs without ($63,866 vs $37,916, p

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Deitelzweig, S., Neuman, W. R., Lingohr-Smith, M., Menges, B., & Lin, J. (2017). Incremental economic burden associated with major bleeding among atrial fibrillation patients treated with factor Xa inhibitors. Journal of Medical Economics, 20(12), 1217–1223. https://doi.org/10.1080/13696998.2017.1362412

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