Economic burden of comorbidities in patients with psoriasis is substantial.

A B Kimball, A Guérin, M Tsaneva, A P Yu, E Q Wu, S R Gupta, Y Bao, P M Mulani
Author Information
  1. A B Kimball: Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA. harvardskinstudies@partners.org

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Psoriasis is frequently associated with comorbidities.
OBJECTIVE: To estimate the incremental economic burden associated with comorbidities in patients with Psoriasis, accounting for Psoriasis severity.
METHODS: patients continuously enrolled ≥6 months after a randomly selected Psoriasis diagnosis date were selected from the Ingenix Impact National Managed Care Database (1999-2004). Comorbidities identified during the 6-month study included: psoriatic arthritis, cardiovascular disease, depression, diabetes, hyperlipidemia, hypertension, obesity, cerebrovascular diseases and peripheral vascular disease. Resource utilization and costs during the 6-month follow-up period were compared for patients with ≥1 comorbidity vs. those without and for patients with a specific comorbidity vs. those without. Adjusted incidence rate ratios (IRRs) and odds ratios (ORs) were estimated for resource utilization using negative binomial and logistic regression models, respectively. Adjusted incremental costs associated with comorbidities were reported using general linear models with log-link and gamma distributions or two-part models. Models controlled for age, sex and Psoriasis severity.
RESULTS: A total of 114,512 patients were included; 51% had ≥1 comorbidity. hyperlipidemia (27%) and hypertension (25%) were most prevalent. patients with comorbidities were more likely to experience urgent care [OR (95% confidence interval (CI))=1.58 (1.51-1.65)] than patients without comorbidities. They also had significantly greater hospitalization rates [IRR (95% CI)=2.27 (2.13-2.42)] and outpatient visits [IRR (95% CI)=1.53 (1.52-1.55)]. Compared with patients who did not have comorbidities, patients with comorbidities incurred $2184 (P<0.001) greater total costs.
CONCLUSION: Comorbidities present a significant economic burden in patients with Psoriasis.

MeSH Term

Adult
Comorbidity
Cost of Illness
Health Care Costs
Health Resources
Hospitalization
Humans
Hyperlipidemias
Hypertension
Male
Managed Care Programs
Middle Aged
Psoriasis
Retrospective Studies
Severity of Illness Index
United States

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0patientscomorbiditiespsoriasisassociatedburdencostscomorbiditywithoutmodels95%CI]incrementaleconomicseverityPatientsselectedComorbidities6-monthdiseasehypertensionutilization≥1vsAdjustedratiosusingtotal=11greater[IRRBACKGROUND:PsoriasisfrequentlyOBJECTIVE:estimateaccountingMETHODS:continuouslyenrolled≥6monthsrandomlydiagnosisdateIngenixImpactNationalManagedCareDatabase1999-2004identifiedstudyincluded:psoriaticarthritiscardiovasculardepressiondiabeteshyperlipidemiaobesitycerebrovasculardiseasesperipheralvascularResourcefollow-upperiodcomparedspecificincidencerateIRRsoddsORsestimatedresourcenegativebinomiallogisticregressionrespectivelyreportedgenerallinearlog-linkgammadistributionstwo-partModelscontrolledagesexRESULTS:114512included51%Hyperlipidemia27%25%prevalentlikelyexperienceurgentcare[ORconfidenceinterval5851-165alsosignificantlyhospitalizationrates=227213-242outpatientvisits5352-155Comparedincurred$2184P<0001CONCLUSION:presentsignificantEconomicsubstantial

Similar Articles

Cited By