| Literature DB >> 15946385 |
Louis S Matza1, Clark Paramore, Manishi Prasad.
Abstract
Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a common disorder that is associated with broad functional impairment among both children and adults. The purpose of this paper is to review and summarize available literature on the economic costs of ADHD, as well as potential economic benefits of treating this condition. A literature search was performed using MEDLINE to identify all published articles on the economic implications of ADHD, and authors were contacted to locate conference abstracts and articles in press that were not yet indexed. In total, 22 relevant items were located including published original studies, economic review articles, conference presentations, and reports available on the Internet. All costs were updated and presented in terms of year 2004 US dollars. A growing body of literature, primarily published in the United States, has demonstrated that ADHD places a substantial economic burden on patients, families, and third-party payers. Results of the medical cost studies consistently indicated that children with ADHD had higher annual medical costs than either matched controls (difference ranged from 503 dollars to 1,343 dollars) or non-matched controls (difference ranged from 207 dollars to 1,560 dollars) without ADHD. Two studies of adult samples found similar results, with significantly higher annual medical costs among adults with ADHD (ranging from 4,929 dollars to 5,651 dollars) than among matched controls (ranging from 1,473 dollars to 2,771 dollars). A limited number of studies have examined other economic implications of ADHD including costs to families; costs of criminality among individuals with ADHD; costs related to common psychiatric and medical comorbidities of ADHD; indirect costs associated with work loss among adults with ADHD; and costs of accidents among individuals with ADHD. Treatment cost-effectiveness studies have primarily focused on methylphenidate, which is a cost-effective treatment option with cost-effectiveness ratios ranging from 15,509 dollars to 27,766 dollars per quality-adjusted life year (QALY) gained. As new treatments are introduced it will be important to evaluate their cost-effectiveness to provide an indication of their potential value to clinicians, patients, families, and third-party payers.Entities:
Year: 2005 PMID: 15946385 PMCID: PMC1180839 DOI: 10.1186/1478-7547-3-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cost Eff Resour Alloc ISSN: 1478-7547
Studies of the Direct Costs of ADHD
| Birnbaum et al. 2005 | Treated ADHD patients aged 7–44 (N = 1219) and their family members under age 65 (N = 3692); controls without ADHD matched to both patients (N = 1219) and family members (N = 3692) on age, gender, employment status, geographical location age, gender, state of residence, and employment status) | Claims data from large Fortune 100 company (1996–1998) | This study estimated total excess costs for the US population, defined as the difference between ADHD patients/family members and controls. Annual mean direct ADHD treatment costs (2004 US $) were $674/$745 for girls/boys with ADHD (excess costs = $0.53/$1.06 billion) and $412/$529 for female/male adults with ADHD (excess costs = $0.13/$0.40 billion). Annual other direct treatment costs (2004 US $) were $865/$990 for girls/boys (excess costs = $0.80/$2.0 billion) and $2609/$3022 for female/male adults with ADHD (excess costs = $0.67/$1.46 billion). |
| Burd et al. 2003a | Children aged 0–21 years with ADHD (N = 3,872) and non-matched controls (N = 95,119) without ADHD | North Dakota Health Claims Database (1996–1997) | Annual, mean direct treatment costs (2004 US $) were $870 for ADHD patients versus $663 for controls; 1.9% of total annual health expenditures in North Dakota attributable to ADHD. |
| Chan et al. 2002 | Children aged 5–20 years with ADHD (N = 165), asthma (N = 322) or neither diagnosis (N = 4,952) | Nationally representative household survey data (1996) | Annual, incremental direct treatment costs (2004 US $) were $661 for children with ADHD ( |
| Guevara et al. 2001 | Children aged 3–17 years with ADHD (N = 2992) and matched (on age and sex) controls (N = 11,968) without ADHD | Health maintenance organization in western Washington State (1997) | Annual, incremental direct treatment costs (2004 US $) were $503 (95% CI: $450–552) for children with ADHD alone and $1088 (95% CI: $899–$1,304) for children with ADHD plus coexisting mental health disorders (relative to costs for children with no ADHD) |
| Kelleher et al. 2001 | Children aged 7–20 years with ADHD (N = 1,602) and with asthma (N = 1,411) | Medicaid claims data for patients in Pittsburgh, PA and surrounding counties (1994–1995) | Annual, mean (± SD) direct treatment costs (2004 US $) were $2,567 ± $2,959 for the ADHD group versus $2,382 ± $2,664 for the asthma group (difference not statistically significant) |
| Leibson et al. 2001 | Children aged 5–19 years with ADHD (N = 309) and non-matched controls (N = 3,810) without ADHD | Rochester, Minnesota medical facility-linked billing data system (1987–1995) | Long-term (9 year), median direct treatment costs (2004 US $) for ADHD patients compared with those without ADHD were more than double ($6,158 vs. $2,780; |
| Leslie et al. 2001 | Children aged ≤ 17 years with use of mental health services, including patients with hyperactivity (N~10,000) | Health care claims for privately insured population (MarketScan®) (1993–1996) | Annual inpatient costs (2004 US $) per treated hyperactive patient declined from $26,550 in 1993 to $8,644 in 1996 ( |
| Mandell et al. 2003 | Children aged 3–15 years with ADHD (N = 4,306) and with no psychiatric disorder (N = 60,975) | Medicaid claims data for patients in Philadelphia, PA (1993–1996) | Long-term (3 year), mean direct treatment costs (2004 US $) were $4,891 for ADHD patients versus $221 for patients with no psychiatric disorder |
| Marchetti et al. 2001 | Hypothetical cohort of school-aged children with ADHD | Literature review, managed care survey, clinical experts (2000–2001) | Average, total annual expected cost (2001 US $) per treated patient was $1,710 for Metadate CD, $1876 for Concerta, $2,061 for methylphenidate immediate-release/extended release (MPH IR/ER), $2,122 for MPH IR, $2,392 for Ritalin, and $2,567 for Adderall. |
| Secnik et al. 2005b | Adults aged 18–64 with ADHD (N = 2,252) and matched controls without ADHD (N = 2252; matched on age, gender, metropolitan statistical area, and type of insurance coverage) | Health care claims for privately insured population (MarketScan®) (1999–2001) | Controlling for the impact of comorbidities, adults diagnosed with ADHD had significantly ( |
| Swensen et al. 2003 | Children aged 0–18 years with ADHD (N = 1,086) and matched (on age, gender, and state of residence) controls (N = 1,086) without ADHD | Claims data from large Fortune 100 company (1996–1998) | Annual, mean (± SD) direct treatment costs (2004 US $) were $2,046 ± $3,474 for the ADHD group versus $703 ± $2,215 for matched controls without ADHD ( |
| Swensen et al. 2004 | Individuals aged 0–64 with ADHD (N = 1,308) and matched (on age, gender, state of residence, and employment status) controls (N = 1,308) without ADHD | Claims data from large Fortune 100 company (1996–1998) | Annual, mean direct treatment costs (2004 US $) were $1,797 for children with ADHD versus $577 for matched controls without ADHD ( |
1All costs updated to Year 2004 US $ using the Medical Services component of the Consumer Price Index (for US-based studies). For non-US studies, all country-specific costs first updated to Year 2004 currency values based on country-specific inflators; and then converted to Year 2004 US$ based on currency exchange rates.
MPH = methylphenidate
IR = immediate release
ER = extended release
Studies of the Cost-Effectiveness of Treatment for ADHD
| Gilmore & Milne 2001 | MPH, placebo | • Decision analytic model assessing cost-utility | Cost per each additional QALY gained with MPH treatment (versus no treatment) ranged from $15,509 to $19,281 when considering short-and medium-term benefits of MPH. Cost per QALY gained ranged from $9,850–$59,101 in sensitivity analyses |
| Novartis data on file (2000; referenced in Lord & Paisley 2000) | MPH, placebo | • Decision analytic model assessing cost-utility | Cost per each additional QALY gained with MPH treatment (versus no treatment) was $27,766. |
| Zupancic et al. 1998 | MPH, placebo | • Decision analytic model assessing cost-effectiveness | Cost per each additional point in the Conners Teacher Rating Scale gained with MPH treatment (versus no treatment) was $93, or $560 for a 6-point (1 SD) gain. |
1All costs updated to Year 2004 US $ using the Medical Services component of the Consumer Price Index (for US-based studies). For non-US studies, all country-specific costs first updated to Year 2004 currency values based on country-specific inflators; and then converted to Year 2004 US$ based on currency exchange rates.
MPH = methylphenidate
QALY = quality-adjusted life years