Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the economic impact of chronic kidney disease (CKD) on US health plans. STUDY DESIGN: A retrospective analysis identified patients with a renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system inhibitor (RAASi) prescription from an electronic medical record (EMR) database (Humedica); those with =90 days in =1 CKD stage were selected based on estimated glomerular filtration rate or diagnosis code, and a cohort on RAASi medications without CKD was selected. Costs for specific services obtained from OptumInsight were applied to services in EMR data of patients aged <65 years (commercial) and =65 years (Medicare). Dialysis costs were excluded. RESULTS: The study included 106,050 patients with CKD and 56,761 no-CKD controls (90,302 commercial and 72,509 Medicare overall). Mean annualized all-cause costs increased exponentially with advancing stage, from $7537 (no CKD) to $76,969 (CKD stages 4-5) in the commercial group, and $8091 (no CKD) to $46,178 (CKD stages 4-5) in the Medicare group (P
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CITATION STYLE
Golestaneh, L., Alvarez, P. J., Reaven, N. L., Funk, S. E., McGaughey, K. J., Romero, A., … Onuigbo, M. (2017). All-cause costs increase exponentially with increased chronic kidney disease stage. The American Journal of Managed Care, 23(10), S163–S172.
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