Literature DB >> 21067255

Payer costs for inpatient treatment of pathologic fracture, surgery to bone, and spinal cord compression among patients with multiple myeloma or bone metastasis secondary to prostate or breast cancer.

Arie Barlev1, Xue Song, Boris Ivanov, Vidya Setty, Karen Chung.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Patients with bone metastasis secondary to prostate or breast cancer or multiple myeloma are predisposed to skeletal-related events (SREs), such as surgery or radiation to the bone, pathologic fracture, and spinal cord compression. Inpatient costs of these and other SREs represent an estimated 49%-59% of total costs related to SREs. However, information on payer costs for hospitalizations associated with SREs is limited, especially for costs associated with specific SREs by tumor type.
OBJECTIVE: To examine costs from a payer perspective for SRE-associated hospitalizations among patients with multiple myeloma or bone metastasis secondary to prostate or breast cancer.
METHODS: Patients with SRE hospitalizations were selected from the MarketScan commercial and Medicare databases (January 1, 2003, through June 30, 2009). Sampled patients had at least 2 medical claims with primary or secondary ICD-9-CM diagnosis codes for prostate cancer, breast cancer, or multiple myeloma and at least 1 subsequent hospitalization with principal diagnosis or procedure codes indicating bone surgery, pathologic fracture, or spinal cord compression. For patients with prostate cancer or breast cancer, a diagnosis code for bone metastasis was also required. If secondary diagnoses or procedure codes for SREs were present in the claim, they were used to more precisely identify the type of SRE for which the patient was treated, resulting in 3 mutually exclusive categories: spinal cord compression with or without pathologic fracture and/or surgery to the bone; pathologic fracture with or without surgery to the bone; and only surgery to the bone. Related readmissions within 30 days of a previous SRE-associated hospitalization date of discharge were excluded to minimize the risk of underestimating costs. Mean health plan payments per hospitalization, measured as net reimbursed amounts paid by the health plan to a hospital after subtracting patient copayments and deductibles, were analyzed by cancer type and type of SRE.
RESULTS: A total of 555 patients contributed 572 hospitalizations that met the study criteria for prostate cancer, 1,413 patients contributed 1,542 hospitalizations for breast cancer, and 1,361 patients contributed 1,495 hospitalizations for multiple myeloma. The mean age range was 61 to 72 years, and the mean length of stay per admission was 5.9 to 11.6 days across the 3 tumor types. The ranges of mean health plan payment per hospital admission across tumor types were $43,691-$59,854 for spinal cord compression, with or without pathologic fracture and/or surgery to the bone; $22,390-$26,936 for pathologic fracture without spinal cord compression, with or without surgery to the bone; and $31,016-$42,094 for surgery to the bone without pathologic fracture or spinal cord compression.
CONCLUSIONS: The inpatient costs associated with treating SREs are significant from a payer perspective. Our study used a systematic process for patient selection and mutually exclusive categorization by SRE type and provides a per episode estimate of the inpatient financial impact of cancer related SREs assessed in this study from a third-party payer perspective.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 21067255     DOI: 10.18553/jmcp.2010.16.9.693

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Manag Care Pharm        ISSN: 1083-4087


  24 in total

1.  Prostatic adenocarcinoma with initial metastatic spread to the mandible.

Authors:  Özgür Çakmak; Hüseyin Tarhan; Ülkü Küçük; Yusuf Özlem İlbey
Journal:  Turk J Urol       Date:  2015-09

2.  The burden of symptomatic skeletal events in castrate-resistant prostate cancer patients with bone metastases at three Canadian uro-oncology centres.

Authors:  Fred Saad; Neil E Fleshner; Alan So; Jacques Le Lorier; Louise Perrault; Melanie Poulin-Costello; Raina Rogoza; Ewan J D Robson
Journal:  Can Urol Assoc J       Date:  2018-06-19       Impact factor: 1.862

3.  The Clinical and Economic Impacts of Skeletal-Related Events Among Medicare Enrollees With Prostate Cancer Metastatic to Bone.

Authors:  Jean A McDougall; Aasthaa Bansal; Bernardo H L Goulart; Jeannine S McCune; Andy Karnopp; Catherine Fedorenko; Stuart Greenlee; Adriana Valderrama; Sean D Sullivan; Scott D Ramsey
Journal:  Oncologist       Date:  2016-02-10

4.  The economic burden of skeletal-related events among elderly men with metastatic prostate cancer.

Authors:  J Jayasekera; E Onukwugha; K Bikov; C D Mullins; B Seal; A Hussain
Journal:  Pharmacoeconomics       Date:  2014-02       Impact factor: 4.981

5.  Burden of illness of bone metastases in prostate cancer patients in Québec, Canada: A population-based analysis.

Authors:  Louise Perrault; Vincent Fradet; Véronique Lauzon; Jacques LeLorier; Dominic Mitchell; Mohdhar Habib
Journal:  Can Urol Assoc J       Date:  2015 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 1.862

6.  The Effect of Introducing the Spinal Instability Neoplastic Score in Routine Clinical Practice for Patients With Spinal Metastases.

Authors:  Anne L Versteeg; Joanne M van der Velden; Helena M Verkooijen; Marco van Vulpen; F Cumhur Oner; Charles G Fisher; Jorrit-Jan Verlaan
Journal:  Oncologist       Date:  2015-12-14

7.  Cost-Effectiveness Analysis of Monthly Zoledronic Acid, Zoledronic Acid Every 3 Months, and Monthly Denosumab in Women With Breast Cancer and Skeletal Metastases: CALGB 70604 (Alliance).

Authors:  Charles L Shapiro; James P Moriarty; Stacie Dusetzina; Andrew L Himelstein; Jared C Foster; Stephen S Grubbs; Paul J Novotny; Bijan J Borah
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2017-10-12       Impact factor: 44.544

8.  Conventional finite element models estimate the strength of metastatic human vertebrae despite alterations of the bone's tissue and structure.

Authors:  Marc A Stadelmann; Denis E Schenk; Ghislain Maquer; Christopher Lenherr; Florian M Buck; Dieter D Bosshardt; Sven Hoppe; Nicolas Theumann; Ron N Alkalay; Philippe K Zysset
Journal:  Bone       Date:  2020-08-20       Impact factor: 4.626

9.  Protection of bone in premenopausal women with breast cancer: focus on zoledronic acid.

Authors:  Rebecca Aft
Journal:  Int J Womens Health       Date:  2012-10-18

10.  Hospital visits among women with skeletal-related events secondary to breast cancer and bone metastases: a nationwide population-based cohort study in Denmark.

Authors:  Marie Louise Svendsen; Henrik Gammelager; Claus Sværke; Mellissa Yong; Victoria M Chia; Christian F Christiansen; Jon P Fryzek
Journal:  Clin Epidemiol       Date:  2013-03-26       Impact factor: 4.790

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