Economic burden of osteoarthritis - multi-country estimates of direct and indirect costs from the BISCUITS study.

IF 1.5 Q4 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Scandinavian Journal of Pain Pub Date : 2023-06-30 Print Date: 2023-10-26 DOI:10.1515/sjpain-2023-0015
Sara Hallberg, Ola Rolfson, Jaro Karppinen, Berit Schiøttz-Christensen, Audun Stubhaug, Emilie Toresson Grip, Rebecca L Robinson, Anna De Geer, Patricia Schepman
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Abstract

Data from 'BISCUITS', a large Nordic cohort study linking several registries, were used to estimate differences in average direct and indirect costs between patients with osteoarthritis and controls (matched 1:1 based on birth year and sex) from the general population in Sweden, Norway, Finland and Denmark for 2017. Patients ≥18 years with ≥1 diagnosis of osteoarthritis (ICD-10: M15-M19) recorded in specialty or primary care (the latter available for a subset of patients in Sweden and for all patients in Finland) during 2011-2017 were included. Patients with a cancer diagnosis (ICD-10: C00-C43/C45-C97) were excluded. Productivity loss (sick leave and disability pension) and associated indirect costs were estimated among working-age adults (18-66 years). In 2017, average annual incremental direct costs among adults with osteoarthritis (n=1,157,236) in specialty care relative to controls ranged between €1,259 and €1,693 (p<0.001) per patient across all countries. Total average annual incremental costs were €3,224-€4,969 (p<0.001) per patient. Healthcare cost differences were mainly explained by osteoarthritis patients having more surgeries. However, among patients with both primary and secondary care data, primary care costs exceeded the costs of surgery. Primary care constituted 41 and 29 % of the difference in direct costs in Sweden and Finland, respectively. From a societal perspective, the total economic burden of osteoarthritis is substantial, and the incremental cost was estimated to €1.1-€1.3 billion yearly for patients in specialty care across the Nordic countries. When including patients in primary care, incremental costs rose to €3 billion in Sweden and €1.8 billion in Finland. Given the large economic impact, finding cost-effective and safe therapeutic strategies for these patients will be important.

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骨关节炎的经济负担-BISCUITS研究中对直接和间接成本的多国估计。
“BISCUITS”是一项连接多个登记处的大型北欧队列研究,其数据用于估计2017年瑞典、挪威、芬兰和丹麦普通人群中骨关节炎患者与对照组(根据出生年份和性别1:1匹配)之间的平均直接和间接费用差异。2011-2017年期间,在专科或初级护理(瑞典的一部分患者和芬兰的所有患者均可使用后者)中记录的≥18岁且诊断为骨关节炎(ICD-10:M15-M19)的患者≥1例。排除诊断为癌症的患者(ICD-10:C00-C43/C45-C97)。估计了工作年龄成年人(18-66岁)的生产力损失(病假和残疾抚恤金)和相关间接成本。2017年,与对照组相比,患有骨关节炎的成人(n=1157236)在专科护理中的年均直接增量费用在1259欧元至1693欧元之间(p
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来源期刊
Scandinavian Journal of Pain
Scandinavian Journal of Pain CLINICAL NEUROLOGY-
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
6.20%
发文量
73
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