Katie Stenson, Sheena Chew, Shaobin Dong, Kim Heithoff, Min-Jung Wang, Jeffrey Rosenfeld
BACKGROUND: People living with ALS (plwALS) experience motor control loss, speech/swallowing difficulties, respiratory insufficiency, and early death. Advancing disease stage is typically associated with a greater burden on the health care system, and delays in diagnosis can result in substantial health care resource utilization (HCRU).
OBJECTIVE: To estimate HCRU and cost burden of plwALS across disease stages from a US payer perspective we assessed HCRU and costs in early-, mid-, and late-stage ALS.
METHODS: Using insurance claims data from the IBM MarketScan Databases between January 2013 and December 2019, we identified plwALS as having at least 2 claims at least 27 days apart with an ALS or diagnosis code (335.20/G12.21) or at least 1 ALS diagnosis code and prescription filled for riluzole/edaravone. Eligible plwALS were aged at least 18 years and had at least 12 months of enrollment data before and at least 6 months after the index date (date diagnosis criteria met). plwALS were grouped into disease stages using an ALS severity-based staging algorithm developed using ALS symptom and staging survey data from 142 neurologists reporting on 880 plwALS. The starting date of each severity stage was defined as the first date of an ALS symptom within the early-, mid-, and late-stage categories, respectively. The ending date for a severity stage was defined as the day before the first date of an ALS symptom from a more severe category. plwALS could transition to more severe stages, with reverse transition of severity excluded. Mixed regression modeling was used to assess differences in HCRU and costs per person-year between severity stages, adjusted for age and sex.
RESULTS: 2,273 plwALS were included in the total ALS study sample, with 1,215 early-stage, 1,511 midstage, and 1,186 late-stage plwALS. 90% of early-stage plwALS had ALS symptoms before diagnosis, and 27% of late-stage plwALS had a late-stage symptom before diagnosis. In the evaluation period, later-stage ALS groups had more overall hospital admissions (early = 0.15, middle = 0.23, and late = 0.74; < 0.01), outpatient visits/service (early = 26.81, middle = 32.78, and late = 48.54; < 0.01), emergency department visits (early = 0.46, middle = 0.69, and late = 1.03; < 0.01), and total prescription count (early = 9.23, middle = 11.37, and late = 12.72; < 0.01) over 12 months. Annualized costs increased as ALS progressed (early = $31,411, middle = $51,481, and late = $121,903; < 0.01), which was primarily driven by higher frequency of and cost per hospital admission.
CONCLUSIONS: HCRU and costs increased with ALS progression, with diagnosis frequently occurring even after experiencing late-stage symptoms. These findings highlight the potential value of delaying progression into a more resource-intensive stage by diagnosing and adequately treating plwALS earlier in the disease course.
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