Literature DB >> 21348565

Relationship between short-acting β2-adrenergic agonist use and healthcare costs.

Harris S Silver1, Christopher M Blanchette, Shital Kamble, Hans Petersen, Matthew A Letter, David Meddis, Benjamin Gutierrez.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To assess whether increased short-acting β(2)-adrenergic agonist (SABA) claims are associated with asthma exacerbations and increased healthcare costs. STUDY
DESIGN: Cross-sectional study.
METHODS: Patients (N = 93,604) were health plan members aged 6-56 years with at least 2 years of enrollment between July 1, 2003, and June 30, 2007, an asthma diagnosis, and at least 1 asthma medication claim per study year. Two years of administrative claims were collected. SABA use was categorized as 0 (none), (1/2) to 2 (low), 2(1/2) to 6 (moderate), 6(1/2) to 12 (high), and more than 12 (excessive) canister equivalents per year. Multivariate analyses were adjusted for age, sex, geographic region, comorbidities, specialist consultation, controller medication use, and asthma severity.
RESULTS: Half of high and excessive SABA users had few or no controller claims. Compared with SABA nonusers, high and excessive SABA users had significantly higher odds (odds ratio [95% confidence interval]) of asthma-related emergency department/urgent care visits (6.47 [5.25, 7.98] and 7.68 [6.04, 9.76], respectively), hospitalizations (5.37 [6.04, 9.76]; 6.90 [4.90, 9.73]), and oral corticosteroid use (2.89 [2.72, 3.08]; 3.71 [3.41, 4.03]). Excessive SABA users had 3.0 times ($1791) and high SABA users had 2.2 times ($1326) higher asthma-related healthcare costs than low SABA users ($595). Total costs also increased with higher SABA use, but with smaller incremental differences between excessive and high SABA users and low SABA users.
CONCLUSIONS: Increased SABA use is associated with higher total and asthma-related healthcare costs. Opportunity exists to lessen overreliance on SABAs.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21348565

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Manag Care        ISSN: 1088-0224            Impact factor:   2.229


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