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Journal Article
Observational Study
Healthcare utilization and costs in patients with tuberous sclerosiscomplex-related renal angiomyolipoma.
Journal of Medical Economics 2017 April
OBJECTIVE: To quantify healthcare utilization and costs in patients with tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) and renal angiomyolipoma (AML) in a matched cohort of patients without TSC or AML.
METHODS: Administrative data from the MarketScan Research Databases were used to select patients with TSC and renal AML during January 1, 2000-March 31, 2013 from the Commercial database and January 1, 2000-June 30, 2012 from the Medicaid database. Patients were required to have at least 30 days of follow-up from initiation into the study, and were followed until inpatient death, end of insurance coverage, or the end of study. Age, calendar year, and payer-matched controls that had no TSC and no AML were selected. All-cause annualized healthcare utilization and costs were calculated by service category.
RESULTS: A total of 218 patients under 18 years and 377 patients 18 years and older with TSC-renal AML were selected from the Commercial database, and matched to 654 and 1,131 controls, respectively. Thirty-eight patients under 18 years and 110 patients 18 years or older with TSC-renal AML were selected from the Medicaid database, and matched to 54 and 212 controls, respectively. Within the Commercial cohort, and across both age groups, TSC-renal AML patients utilized more healthcare services than their matched controls. Within the Medicaid cohort, in both age groups, utilization was higher in TSC-renal AML patients vs control patients for inpatient admissions, emergency room visits, physician office visits, and hospital-based outpatient visits. Across age groups and in both the Commercial and Medicaid cohorts, the annual average total costs were significantly higher in TSC-renal AML patients compared to control patients (p < 0.05 for all). Healthcare costs ranged from $29,240-$48,499 for TSC-renal AML patients and from $2,082-$10,864 for control patients.
CONCLUSIONS: Compared to controls, TSC-renal AML patients incurred substantially higher annual healthcare utilization and costs.
METHODS: Administrative data from the MarketScan Research Databases were used to select patients with TSC and renal AML during January 1, 2000-March 31, 2013 from the Commercial database and January 1, 2000-June 30, 2012 from the Medicaid database. Patients were required to have at least 30 days of follow-up from initiation into the study, and were followed until inpatient death, end of insurance coverage, or the end of study. Age, calendar year, and payer-matched controls that had no TSC and no AML were selected. All-cause annualized healthcare utilization and costs were calculated by service category.
RESULTS: A total of 218 patients under 18 years and 377 patients 18 years and older with TSC-renal AML were selected from the Commercial database, and matched to 654 and 1,131 controls, respectively. Thirty-eight patients under 18 years and 110 patients 18 years or older with TSC-renal AML were selected from the Medicaid database, and matched to 54 and 212 controls, respectively. Within the Commercial cohort, and across both age groups, TSC-renal AML patients utilized more healthcare services than their matched controls. Within the Medicaid cohort, in both age groups, utilization was higher in TSC-renal AML patients vs control patients for inpatient admissions, emergency room visits, physician office visits, and hospital-based outpatient visits. Across age groups and in both the Commercial and Medicaid cohorts, the annual average total costs were significantly higher in TSC-renal AML patients compared to control patients (p < 0.05 for all). Healthcare costs ranged from $29,240-$48,499 for TSC-renal AML patients and from $2,082-$10,864 for control patients.
CONCLUSIONS: Compared to controls, TSC-renal AML patients incurred substantially higher annual healthcare utilization and costs.
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