Wattanakamolkul K, Nakayama Y. Incidence, economic burden, and treatment of acute respiratory tract infection in hematopoietic stem cell transplantation recipients using real world data in Japan: a retrospective claims data analysis.
J Med Econ 2022;
25:870-879. [PMID:
35703058 DOI:
10.1080/13696998.2022.2088184]
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Abstract
AIMS
Acute respiratory tract infections (ARTIs) are common in hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) recipients, however, data is limited regarding epidemiology and economic burden of ARTI in HSCT recipients in Japan. We evaluated the incidence of ARTI in HSCT recipients, associated economic burden, and ARTI-related treatments post-HSCT.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Patients receiving HSCT between July 2017 and December 2018, and those enrolled in the JMDC Claims Database for ≥6 months before index month (month when latest medical procedure code of HSCT recorded) were included. The outcomes included demographics, ARTI incidence, healthcare resource utilization (HCRU), direct costs, and ARTI-related treatments.
RESULTS
In 330 analyzed patients, the ARTI incidence rate was 85.5% during total follow-up, consisting of post-HSCT hospitalization of mean 2.1 months and post-discharge periods of mean 17.6 months (post-HSCT hospitalization: 44.8%; post-discharge: 77.6%). For ARTI vs non-ARTI patients during post-HSCT hospitalization, length of hospitalization was significantly longer (mean [SD] months; 2.40 [1.73] vs 1.84 [1.09]; p = 0.0004), and median cost was significantly higher (JPY; 6,250,120.00 vs 4,774,570.00; p = 0.0096). The cost of outpatient visits during post-discharge periods, drug-related and non-drug-related costs of outpatient visits were generally higher for ARTI vs non-ARTI patients. In ARTI vs non-ARTI patients, utilization of any symptom relievers (decongestants, antitussives, and antipyretics), bronchodilators, immunoglobulin G, antibiotics, antivirals, and oxygen supply were numerically higher during post-HSCT hospitalization and post-discharge periods. The proportion of patients and mean prescription days for immunosuppressants during post-HSCT hospitalization were higher in ARTI vs non-ARTI patients.
LIMITATIONS
This administrative claims study lacks clinical data and contains only direct medical costs. Patients were retained if they had at least 1 month of enrollment post-HSCT.
CONCLUSIONS
In HSCT recipients, ARTI leads to substantial incremental HCRU and direct costs for management in real-world settings in Japan.
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