scholarly journals Cyclic Vomiting Syndrome-Related Hospitalizations Trends, Comorbidities & Health Care Costs in Children: A Population Based Study

Children ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 55
Author(s):  
Aravind Thavamani ◽  
Krishna Kishore Umapathi ◽  
Jasmine Khatana ◽  
Sanjay Bhandari ◽  
Katja Kovacic ◽  
...  

Aim: To analyze the clinical characteristics, trends in hospitalization and health care resource utilization of pediatric patients with cyclical vomiting syndrome (CVS). Methods: We analyzed the latest 5 Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project-Kids Inpatient Database (HCUP-KID) datasets including years 2003, 2006, 2009, 2012 and 2016 for patients aged 1–20 years with a primary diagnosis of CVS and were compared with Age/gender-matched controls for comorbidities, clinical outcomes, and healthcare resource utilization. Results: A total of 12,396 CVS-related hospitalizations were analyzed. The mean age of CVS patients was 10.4 ± 6.7 years. CVS was associated with dysautonomia (OR: 12.1; CI: 7.0 to 20.8), dyspepsia (OR: 11.9; CI: 8.8 to 16.03), gastroesophageal reflux disease (OR: 6.9; Confidence Interval (CI): 6.4 to 7.5), migraine headaches (OR: 6.8; CI: 5.9 to 7.7) and irritable bowel syndrome (OR: 2.08; CI: 1.2 to 4.3) (all p < 0.001). CVS was also associated with increased cannabis use (OR: 5.26, 4.6 to 5.9; p < 0.001), anxiety disorder (OR: 3.9; CI: 3.5 to 4.4) and stress reaction (OR: 3.6; CI: 2.06 to 6.3), p < 0.001. Mean CVS-related hospitalization costs (inflation adjusted) more than doubled from $3199 in 2003 to $6721 in 2016, incurring $84 million/year in total costs. Conclusion: Hospitalized CVS patients have increased prevalence of DGBIs, dysautonomia, psychiatric conditions and cannabis use compared to non-CVS controls. CVS-related hospitalizations in U.S. is associated with increasing health care costs. Better management of CVS and comorbid conditions is warranted to reduce health care costs and improve outcomes.

2010 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 74-80 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohsen Sadatsafavi ◽  
Larry Lynd ◽  
Carlo Marra ◽  
Bruce Carleton ◽  
Wan C Tan ◽  
...  

BACKGROUND: A better understanding of health care costs associated with asthma would enable the estimation of the economic burden of this increasingly common disease.OBJECTIVE: To determine the direct medical costs of asthma-related health care in British Columbia (BC).METHODS: Administrative health care data from the BC Linked Health Database and PharmaNet database from 1996 to 2000 were analyzed for BC residents five to 55 years of age, including the billing information for physician visits, drug dispensations and hospital discharge records. A unit cost was assigned to physician/emergency department visits, and government reimbursement fees for prescribed medications were applied. The case mix method was used to calculate hospitalization costs. All costs were reported in inflation-adjusted 2006 Canadian dollars.RESULTS: Asthma resulted in $41,858,610 in annual health care-related costs during the study period ($331 per patient-year). The major cost component was medications, which accounted for 63.9% of total costs, followed by physician visits (18.3%) and hospitalization (17.8%). When broader definitions of asthma-related hospitalizations and physician visits were used, total costs increased to $56,114,574 annually ($444 per patient-year). There was a statistically significant decrease in the annual per patient cost of hospitalizations (P<0.01) over the study period. Asthma was poorly controlled in 63.5% of patients, with this group being responsible for 94% of asthma-related resource use.CONCLUSION: The economic burden of asthma is significant in BC, with the majority of the cost attributed to poor asthma control. Policy makers should investigate the reason for lack of proper asthma control and adjust their policies accordingly to improve asthma management.


2018 ◽  
Vol 104 (2) ◽  
pp. 137-144 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rafael Pinedo-Villanueva ◽  
Leo D. Westbury ◽  
Holly E. Syddall ◽  
Maria T. Sanchez-Santos ◽  
Elaine M. Dennison ◽  
...  

2008 ◽  
Vol 15 (9) ◽  
pp. 634-640 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thu-Ha Nguyen ◽  
Philip Jacobs ◽  
Anita Hanrahan ◽  
Nonie Fraser-Lee ◽  
Winnie Wong ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 4231-4231
Author(s):  
B. Douglas Smith ◽  
Dalia Mahmoud ◽  
Stacey Dacosta Byfield ◽  
Henry J Henk

Abstract Abstract 4231 Background: In the US, understanding the costs associated with Myelodysplastic Syndromes (MDS) is challenging given that multiple channels including pharmacy, ambulatory, and inpatient hospitalization (IPH) settings make up the total expenses to manage patients. Recent studies suggest that MDS patients under active medical management experience fewer cytopenia-related medical problems compared to untreated, transfusion dependent (TD) patients who require more medical treatments, often for recurrent infections and bleeding complications. It is clear that persistence of drug therapy is essential to achieve optimal clinical responses for MDS patients and we sought to determine if continued therapy also optimized costs related to the disease. Aim: To evaluate the relationship between treatment persistence with AZA and health care costs encountered for patients with MDS. Methods: Commercial and Medicare Advantage enrollees with a diagnosis of high grade MDS (ICD-9, 238.73) who initiated AZA with pharmacy and medical benefits in the prior 6 months and who had a variable follow up period from initiation of AZA to disenrollment or end of study were identified in a US health plan claims database (1/1/2007-6/30/2010). The number of AZA “cycles” was calculated by dividing the total number of AZA administrations by 7 days, with a sensitivity analysis for 5 day administration, - commonly utilized in the “real-world”. Persistence was defined as the number of cycles of AZA. Eligible patientshad to have at least 2 AZA cycles. An independent analysis identified health care costs for the same patients during periods of transfusion-dependence (TD) - defined as periods in which they received 2 transfusions in an 8 week period and did not receive erythropoietin-stimulating agents (ESAs) or AZA. Average Per Patient Per Month (PPPM) costs were examined among patients with various lengths of TD periods, up to 1 year. Linear models were used to examine the relationship between persistence on AZA and PPPM health care costs. Healthcare costs included both payer and patient paid amounts under the medical and pharmacy benefit. Medical costs were further broken out into IPHs, ambulatory, and other costs captured. Several sensitivity analyses were performed to confirm the robustness of the results such as excluding patients with IPH prior to AZA initiation, and including patients with <2 cycles of AZA. Results: The baseline cost breakdown for MDS patients (n=225) who were transfusion dependent and not receiving treatment are outlined in Figure 1. Interestingly, the largest proportion of the medical costs for TD patients comes from IPHs. In fact, the PPPM IPH costs among TD periods account for approximately 65–75% of total health care costs - even at one year of their diagnosis. A similar analysis was done for patients completing at least 2 cycles of AZA (n = 100) which suggested that the proportion of cost related to IPHs was closer to 40%. This cohort averaged 6.3 cycles (median = 5) with 24% of patients completing at least 8 cycles. Importantly, completion of every additional AZA cycle (baseline 7day analysis) was found to be associated with, on average, a 6% decrease in medical care costs (p=0.005) driven largely by an 18% decrease in IPH costs (p<0.001; Figure 2) due to fewer medical events. Even a single additional AZA cycle was found to be associated with 5% lower total health care cost (p=0.006). These results also hold in the sensitivity analyses. As expected, an examination of medical needs of both TD and AZA treated patients led infections as a frequent driver of IPHs. Conclusions: Patients who persist with AZA therapy have lower PPPM medical costs, driven by decreased expenditures on IPHs. This is consistent with results identified in the AZA-001 clinical trial in which patients receiving AZA experienced reduced IPHs driven by less transfusions and need for IV antibiotics, antifungals, and antivirals. These lower overall costs offset the expected increase in continuing therapy based on the cost of drug alone. Improving duration of therapy of AZA may not only optimize clinical outcomes but may decrease cumulative costs of care among high risk MDS patients. Disclosures: Smith: Celgene: Consultancy. Mahmoud:celgene: Employment. Dacosta Byfield:Celgene: Consultancy. Henk:Celgene: Consultancy.


2013 ◽  
Vol 21 (13) ◽  
pp. 1063-1072 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emma Sciberras ◽  
Nina Lucas ◽  
Daryl Efron ◽  
Lisa Gold ◽  
Harriet Hiscock ◽  
...  

Objective: To examine the health care costs associated with ADHD within a nationally representative sample of children. Method: Data were from Waves 1 to 3 (4-9 years) of the Longitudinal Study of Australian Children ( N = 4,983). ADHD was defined by previous diagnosis and a measure of ADHD symptoms (Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire [SDQ]). Participant data were linked to administrative data on health care costs. Analyses controlled for demographic factors and internalizing and externalizing comorbidities. Results: Costs associated with health care attendances and medications were higher for children with parent-reported ADHD at each age. Cost differences were highest at 8 to 9 years for both health care attendances and medications. Persistent symptoms were associated with higher costs ( p < .001). Excess population health care costs amounted to Aus$25 to Aus$30 million over 6 years, from 4 to 9 years of age. Conclusion: ADHD is associated with significant health care costs from early in life. Understanding the costs associated with ADHD is an important first step in helping to plan for service-system changes.


2012 ◽  
Vol 16 (4) ◽  
pp. 323-328 ◽  
Author(s):  
Scott L. Parker ◽  
David N. Shau ◽  
Stephen K. Mendenhall ◽  
Matthew J. McGirt

Object Revision lumbar fusion procedures are technically challenging and can be associated with tremendous health care resource utilization and cost. There is a paucity of data regarding specific factors that significantly contribute to increased cost of care. In light of this, the authors set out to identify independent risk factors predictive of increasing 2-year direct health care costs after revision lumbar fusion. Methods One hundred fifty patients undergoing revision instrument-assisted fusion for adjacent-segment disease (50 cases), pseudarthrosis (47 cases), or same-level stenosis (53 cases) were included in this study. Patient demographics, comorbidities, preoperative health states as assessed by patient-reported outcome questionnaires and perioperative complications were collected and analyzed. Two-year back-related medical resource utilization and direct health care costs were assessed. The independent association of all variables to increasing cost was assessed using multivariate linear regression analysis. Results There was a wide range ($24,935–$63,769) in overall 2-year direct costs for patients undergoing revision lumbar fusion (mean $32,915 ± $8344 [± SD]). Preoperative variables independently associated with 2-year direct health care costs included diagnosis of congestive heart failure, more severe leg pain (visual analog scale), greater back-related disability (Oswestry Disability Index), and worse mental health (12-Item Short Form Health Survey Mental Component Summary score). There was a 1.1- to 1.2-fold increase in cost for patients in the greatest quartiles compared with those in the lowest quartiles for these variables. Surgical site infection, return to the operating room, and spine-related hospital readmission during the 90-day global health period were postoperative variables independently associated with 2-year cost. Patients in the greatest versus lowest quartiles had a 1.7- to 1.9-fold increase in cost for these variables. Conclusions Revision lumbar fusion can be associated with considerable 2-year health care costs. These costs can also vary widely among patients, as evidenced by the 2.6-fold overall cost range in this series. Although comorbidities and preoperative severity of disease states contribute to cost of care, the primary drivers of increased cost include perioperative complications such as surgical site infection, return to the operating room, and readmission during the global health period. Measures focused on health service improvement will be most successful in reducing the cost of care for patients undergoing revision lumbar fusion.


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