| Literature DB >> 22461152 |
Jean-Eric Tarride1, Na Guo, Robert Hopkins, William D Leslie, Suzanne Morin, Jonathan D Adachi, Alexandra Papaioannou, Louis Bessette, Jacques P Brown, Ron Goeree.
Abstract
There is a dearth of information about the burden of osteoporosis in Canadian men. To fill this gap, we conducted a burden of illness study aimed at estimating the economic burden attributable to osteoporosis in Canadian men aged 50 years and older. Five national data sources were used to estimate health care resource utilization and costs (in 2010 Canadian dollars) associated with osteoporosis in men. Any information gap was supplemented by using data from provincial and community sources. Direct medical costs included costs associated with hospitalizations, same day surgeries, emergency room visits, rehabilitation, chronic care, long-term care, home care, physician visits, and prescribed medications. The value of lost productivity from patients and informal caregivers was also determined to provide a societal perspective. Sensitivity analyses were conducted to evaluate the impact of key assumptions on the results. In fiscal year 2007/2008, the total economic burden of treating and rehabilitating male osteoporotic fractures was estimated at $570 million per year, where direct medical costs accounted for 86%. Acute care utilization was responsible for 70% of all direct costs. About 51% of all hospitalizations were for hip fractures and hip fractures alone accounted for 54% of the acute care spending. If a proportion of Canadian men were assumed to live in long-term care facilities due to osteoporosis, the overall annual cost of osteoporosis would increase from $570 million to $910 million. Male osteoporosis has a substantial economic burden on the Canadian society.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22461152 PMCID: PMC5104535 DOI: 10.1002/jbmr.1615
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Bone Miner Res ISSN: 0884-0431 Impact factor: 6.741
Unit costs, data sources, and main costing assumptions
| Cost component | Item | Unit costs (data source) | Main costing assumptions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Acute care (includes acute care bed admissions, emergency room visits, day surgeries— with identical methodology) | Cost per RIW | $5,399.04 (CIHI) |
Quebec hospitalizations extrapolated from all other Canadian provinces Ontario data on number of same day surgeries and emergency room visits extrapolated to Canada Patient-level costing |
| Physician visit fees | $79.20 (admission); $55.45 (2nd, 3rd, and last day); $29.20 (other days) (OSBPS) | ||
| Diagnostic tests | Range from $33 for wrist X-ray to $117 for MRI of vertebral fracture (average of $75) (OSBPS) | ||
| Surgeon, surgical assistant, and anesthesiologist procedure fees for assessment, procedure, and follow-up | Range from $76 immobilization of hip to $2,551 for fixation or reduction for vertebral fracture (average $1,352) (OSBPS) | ||
| Rehabilitation | Cost per RIW per stay | $15,449 (CIHI) |
Based on net transfers from acute care Length of stay and costing based on rehabilitation database Patient-level costing |
| Continuing care | Cost per RIW per day | $420.12 (CIHI) |
Based on net transfers from acute care Length of stay and costing based on continuing database Patient-level costing |
| Home care | Cost per week | $168.50 (MDS Inter-rai) |
Ontario data on number of recipients extrapolated to Canada Length of stay based on Manitoba data and unit costs from Ontario |
| Long-term care | Cost per day | $147.77 (Ontario provincial budget) |
Based on net transfers from acute care Length of stay based on Manitoba data and unit costs from Ontario |
| Outpatient physician services | Physician visit fees | General practice: consultation (1 per year) $56.10, repeat consultation $42.35 | Assume 50% of visits are consultation and 50% are repeat consultations |
| Drug costs | National estimates from public and private plans | Retail drug price as charged, plus $7.00 dispensing fee (IMS Brogan PharmaStat©) | 100% of public data programs covered in most provinces (except PEI and Social Services in Alberta) |
| Productivity losses | Cost per day | $24.12 per hour×8 h per day (Statistics Canada) |
Number of days based on CAMOS data |
RIW resource intensity weight, CIHI Canadian Institute for Health Information, OSBPS Ontario Schedule of Benefits for Physician Services, MDS Inter-rai minimal data set
For example, fees associated with orthopedic surgeons, anesthesiologists, and radiologists as not included in RIW
IMS Brogan data request: http://www.store.imshealth.com/
Canadian hospitalizations and hospitalized days for osteoporosis-related fractures by gender and type of fracture (fiscal year 2007/2008)
| Fracture type | Number of hospitalizations: all Canada except Quebec
| Number of hospitalizations: Quebec (extrapolated)
| Number of hospitalizations: Canada | Number of hospitalized days: Canada | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Women | Men | Total | Women | Men | Total | Total | Total | |
| Hip | 15,519 | 6,165 | 21,684 | 5,156 | 2,027 | 7,183 | 28,867 | 448,776 |
| Humerus | 1,623 | 4,54 | 2,077 | 397 | 111 | 508 | 2,585 | 30,141 |
| Vertebral | 1,077 | 6,45 | 1,722 | 360 | 215 | 575 | 2,297 | 34,490 |
| Wrist | 2,983 | 9,37 | 3,920 | 714 | 224 | 938 | 4,858 | 24,132 |
| Multiple site | 3,325 | 1,579 | 4,904 | 762 | 362 | 1,124 | 6,028 | 124,000 |
| Other site | 7,034 | 3,366 | 10,400 | 1,608 | 770 | 2,378 | 12,778 | 171,055 |
| Total | 31,561 | 13,146 | 44,707 | 8,997 | 3,709 | 12,709 | 57,413 | 832,594 |
Fig. 1Number of same day surgeries, emergency room visits, and hospitalizations by type of osteoporosis-related fracture in Canada in fiscal year 2007/2008 (independent of discharge destination)
Acute care costs (2010 Canadian dollars)
| Fracture type | Emergency care | Acute care admissions | Same day surgery | Total acute care costs | Percent of total costs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hip | $40,493,177 | $582,058,662 | $288,169 | $622,840,008 | 53% |
| Humerus | $11,681,974 | $32,324,504 | $451,514 | $44,457,992 | 4% |
| Vertebral | $5,186,182 | $31,720,622 | $237,393 | $37,144,197 | 3% |
| Wrist | $55,420,934 | $43,028,096 | $9,497,406 | $107,946,436 | 9% |
| Multiple sites | $9,322,424 | $141,035,749 | $321,292 | $150,679,465 | 13% |
| Other sites | $38,803,610 | $178,163,216 | $1,239,783 | $218,206,609 | 18% |
| Total | $160,908,302 | $1,008,330,849 | $12,035,556 | $1,181,274,707 | 100% |
| Percent of total costs | 14% | 85% | 1% | 100% | |
| Percent of total costs attributed to women | 72% | 71% | 76% | 71% |
Fig. 2Entrance and discharge institutions following hospitalization for osteoporosis-related fracture (N=57,433)
Burden of osteoporosis: base case and sensitivity analyses (2010 Canadian dollars)
| Cost component | Base case analysis | Change attribution rates of osteoporosis using ROCQ data instead of MacKey et al. | Add costs attributed to hospitalizations due to osteoporosis only ( | Assumes that a proportion of long-term care residents were admitted due to osteoporosis-related fractures | Assumes that all high and low-trauma fractures are osteoporotic |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acute care costs (hospitalization, same day surgeries, and emergency room visits) | $1,181,274,707 | $1,134,803,061 | $1,219,450,008 | Unchanged | $1,318,689,391 |
| Rehabilitation costs | $97,169,606 | $95,280,270 | $103,457,541 | Unchanged | $120,170,851 |
| Continuing care costs | $112,720,625 | $110,024,143 | $119,837,738 | Unchanged | $140,969,693 |
| Long-term care | $28,275,046 | $26,487,393 | Unchanged | $1,641,017,974 | $46,532,134 |
| Home care services | $244,565,735 | Unchanged | Unchanged | Unchanged | Unchanged |
| Physician costs | $142,589,880 | Unchanged | Unchanged | Unchanged | Unchanged |
| Prescribed drug costs | $390,854,843 | Unchanged | Unchanged | Unchanged | Unchanged |
| Indirect costs | $115,311,966 | $115,045,033 | Unchanged | Unchanged | $117,076,070 |
| Total cost | $2,312,762,408 | $2,263,759,530 | $2,364,342,757 | $3,925,505,337 | $2,519,684,494 |
ROCQ Recognizing Osteoporosis and its Consequences
List of ICD-10 CA codes by type of fracture
| Fracture type | ICD 10 codes relating to fracture type |
|---|---|
| Hip | S72.0, S72.1, S72.2 |
| Humerus | S42.2 |
| Vertebral | S22.0, S22.1, S32.0 |
| Wrist | S52 with CCI codes |
| Other sites: | |
| • Femur | S72.3, S72.4, S72.7, S72.8, S72.9 |
| • Lower leg (tibia, fibula, ankle, knee, foot) | S82.0–S82.9, S92 |
| • Lower arm (radius, ulna) | S52 |
| • Other site (rib, shoulder, arm) | S22.3, S42.0, S42.7, S42.8, S42.9 |
| • Other fractures including: | S22.2, S22.4, S22.8, S22.9 |
| • ribs/sternum, clavicle, pelvis, patella, | S32.1, S32.3, S32.4, S32.5, S32.7, S32.8 |
| • tibia/fibula, ankle | S42.0–42.9 except 42.2, S42.7, S42.8, S42.9 |
| Multiple fractures | T02.1–T02.9 ( |