PRS11 Cost per Hospitalization of Respiratory Syncytial VIRUS in US Infants: Literature Review and Synthesis

2021 ◽  
Vol 24 ◽  
pp. S214-S215
Author(s):  
D. Bowser ◽  
D. Shepard ◽  
K. Rowlands ◽  
R. Gervasio ◽  
E. Glaser ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Ignacio Oulego-Erroz ◽  
Pilar de Castro-Vecino ◽  
Carlos Ocaña-Alcober ◽  
Soraya Gutiérrez-Marqués ◽  
Juan Pablo Martínez-Badás ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Julie A. Spencer ◽  
Deborah P. Shutt ◽  
Sarah K. Moser ◽  
Hannah Clegg ◽  
Helen J. Wearing ◽  
...  

Influenza-like illness (ILI) accounts for a large burden of annual morbidity and mortality worldwide. A finer-grained knowledge of the parameters and dynamics of the viruses commonly underlying ILI is needed for modeling, diagnostic, and intervention efforts. We conducted an extensive literature review for epidemiological parameter values for influenza, respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), rhinovirus, human coronavirus (HCoV), and adenovirus. We also developed a deterministic SEIR model for ILI, and derived an expression for R0. We here report ranges and means for parameters for these five common viruses.


2021 ◽  
Vol 15 ◽  
pp. 117955652110292
Author(s):  
Canna Ghia ◽  
Gautam Rambhad

Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is one of the leading causes of lower respiratory tract infections in young children. Globally, there is huge disease burden, high treatment cost, and health impact beyond acute episodes due to RSV which necessitate development and implementation of preventive strategies for the control of RSV infection. The disease burden due to RSV in pediatric population across India is still not clearly understood so this literature review was therefore conducted to gather data on disease burden due to RSV in Indian pediatric population. Systematic literature search was performed using PubMed and Google search with different medical subject headings from 2007 to 2020. Studies performed in Indian pediatric population were selected for review. Literature review revealed that in India, epidemiology of RSV infection is well documented in young children (0-5 years) as compared to children from other age groups. The rates of RSV detection in various studies conducted in younger children (0-5 years) vary from 2.1% to 62.4% in India which is higher as compared to children from other age groups. In India, RSV mainly peaks around rainy to early winter season, that is, during months of June through October while smaller peak was noted during December, January, and February. In 2020, higher RSV-associated disease burden was reported among children (<5 years) in low-income and lower-middle-income countries. Considering significant disease burden due to RSV in young Indian children, availability of RSV vaccine would be crucial to prevent RSV infections in children and its spread in the community.


2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S764-S764
Author(s):  
Diana Bowser ◽  
Reissa Gervasio ◽  
Elizabeth Glaser ◽  
Dhwani Harihan ◽  
Katie Rowlands ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is a human orthopneumovirus spread by direct contact with symptomatic, infected individuals. An estimated 587,000 RSV LRTIs result in inpatient or outpatient encounters annually among US infants (Rainisch et al 2019). The health care costs associated with RSV include medical costs to insurers, governments, and households, travel, and loss of wages. Initial summary of Inpatient and Ambulatory Medical Costs p Infant w RSV.JPG Jun 17th, 2020 @ 2:44 PM 852 x 572 122.3 Kb Methods A systematic literature review of the costs associated with children who have RSV was conducted. Following PRISMA methodology, key search terms were searched within article titles and abstracts through PubMed, EconLit, and Scopus. A total of 1,942 unique abstracts were screened independently by two authors and reduced to 180 articles after applying inclusion and exclusion criteria. The number of included articles after reviewing the full text was 66. Costing results were adjusted to USD2020 based on the Medical Care Consumer Price Index. Results Costing results were reported mainly for medical costs in inpatient settings. Initial results show that annual mean inpatient costs per RSV patient range among individual studies from $9,825 (SD=$25,227) for full term infants to $26,120 (SD unspecified) for late preterm infants (Table 1). Costing results vary by gestational age, with late preterm infants having an annual mean inpatient cost almost 1.6 times that of a full term infant. Inpatient costs for RSV infants are higher for commercial pay versus Medicaid, for both full term infants (commercial mean=$16,489 SD=$31,068, Medicaid mean=$10,291 SD=$64,625) and late preterm infants (commercial mean=$23,836; SD=$43,709, Medicaid mean=$18,864 SD=$28,716). Annual RSV ambulatory costs per infant vary between $4,371 (SD=$13,411) and $19,963 (SD=$27,269), depending on gestational age. Other relevant RSV costs include preventative drug costs, such as palivizumab (average $11,954 per infant). Conclusion The literature describes the economic impact of RSV primarily for hospitalization of children with underlying comorbidities. There is a need to better understand costing results for RSV, including the burden in ambulatory settings and indirect costs to families affected. Disclosures All Authors: No reported disclosures


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