Literature DB >> 23152695

Comparing common reasons for inpatient and outpatient visits between commercially-insured duloxetine or pregabalin initiators with fibromyalgia.

Yang Zhao1, Peter Sun, Mark Bernauer.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The purpose of this study was to examine the main reasons for inpatient or outpatient visits after initiating duloxetine or pregabalin.
METHODS: Commercially insured patients with fibromyalgia and aged 18-64 years who initiated duloxetine or pregabalin in 2006 with 12-month continuous enrollment before and after initiation were identified. Duloxetine and pregabalin cohorts with similar demographics, pre-index clinical and economic characteristics, and pre-index treatment patterns were constructed via propensity scoring stratification. Reasons for inpatient admissions, physician office visits, outpatient hospital visits, emergency room visits, and primary or specialty care visits over the 12 months post-index period were examined and compared. Logistic regression was used to assess the contribution of duloxetine versus pregabalin initiation to the most common reasons for visits, controlling for cross-cohort differences.
RESULTS: Per the study design, the duloxetine (n = 3711) and pregabalin (n = 4111) cohorts had similar demographics (mean age 51 years, 83% female) and health care costs over the 12-month pre-index period. Total health care costs during the 12-month post-index period were significantly lower for duloxetine patients than for pregabalin patients ($19,378 versus $27,045, P < 0.05). Eight of the 10 most common reasons for inpatient admissions and outpatient hospital (physician office, emergency room, primary or specialty care) visits were the same for both groups. Controlling for cross-cohort differences, duloxetine patients were less likely to be hospitalized due to an intervertebral disc disorder or major depressive disorder, to have a physician office visit due to nonspecific backache/other back/neck pain (NB/OB/NP) disorder, or to go to specialty care due to a soft tissue, NB/OP/NP, or intervertebral disc disorder. However, duloxetine patients were more likely to have a primary care visit due to a soft tissue disorder, essential hypertension, or other general symptoms.
CONCLUSION: Among similar commercially insured patients with fibromyalgia who initiated duloxetine or pregabalin, duloxetine patients had significantly lower health care costs over the 12-month post-index period. The leading reasons for inpatient or outpatient visits were also somewhat different.

Entities:  

Keywords:  duloxetine; emergency room; inpatient admissions; outpatient hospital visits; physician office visits; pregabalin; primary care visits; specialty care visits

Year:  2012        PMID: 23152695      PMCID: PMC3496526          DOI: 10.2147/JPR.S35649

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Pain Res        ISSN: 1178-7090            Impact factor:   3.133


Introduction

Fibromyalgia is a chronic pain disorder1–8 characterized by widespread muscle pain and a heightened and painful response to gentle touch at multiple tender points.1–10 About 4–10 million people in the US and 3%–6% of the world population have fibromyalgia,1,4–7,11–18 and the highest prevalence occurs among women and people with a family history of fibromyalgia.4–7,9 Patients with fibromyalgia often experience other conditions, such as fatigue, sleep deprivation, and depression,19–22 which may have a negative impact on general functioning and overall quality of life.23–25 Up until now, treatment for fibromyalgia has been mainly aimed at symptom management through pharmacologic therapy, behavioral intervention, physical therapy, exercise, or alternative medicines.26–34 Among the various pharmacologic therapies used by patients with fibromyalgia, duloxetine (2008), pregabalin (2007), and milnacipran (2009) are the only ones approved for the management of fibromyalgia by the US Food and Drug Administration. A recent publication from our previous study among commercially insured patients with fibromyalgia suggested that individuals who initiated duloxetine had better medication compliance and significantly lower direct medical costs than similar patients (demographics, comorbidities, prior total health care costs, and prior medication treatment) who initiated pregabalin.35 Although our previous study found that most of the cost difference was from outpatient services followed by inpatient care,35 we did not examine what medical conditions led to inpatient admissions or outpatient visits among similar patients with fibromyalgia who initiated duloxetine or pregabalin, and we also did not explore how different health care services were provided for these patients. Using the same study design on the same patients as examined in our previous study,35 we used a comprehensive disease classification to examine and compare the most common reasons leading to inpatient admissions, hospital outpatient visits, physician office visits, emergency room visits, primary care visits, and specialty care visits among similar commercially insured patients with fibromyalgia who initiated duloxetine versus pregabalin in 2006. Logistic regression was used to assess the contribution of initiation of duloxetine versus pregabalin to the most common reasons, controlling for cross-cohort differences.

Materials and methods

Data source

Deidentified insurance claims from the Thomson Reuters MarketScan® Commercial Claims databases 2005–2007 were examined. The MarketScan databases are compliant with the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, and contain enrollment details, inpatient and outpatient data, and pharmacy claims for individuals covered by over 100 self-insured employers and health plans geographically located throughout the United States. All files can be linked via a unique personal identifier. Demographics, health plan enrollment, health care utilization and costs in inpatient and outpatient settings, and outpatient pharmacy claims are provided for each individual.

Design and duration

This study used a retrospective cohort design. Patients with fibromyalgia who initiated duloxetine or pregabalin in 2006 were grouped into duloxetine or pregabalin cohorts based on the medication initiated. Initiation was defined as a 90-day absence of the initiated medication, with the first initiation date as the index date. The study duration included a 12-month period preceding initiation (pre-index period) and a 12-month period following initiation (post-index period).

Sample selection

As described in our previous publication,35,36 individuals who initiated (a 90-day medication gap) duloxetine or pregabalin in 2006 were first identified. All selected patients were required to: have at least one fibromyalgia diagnosis (ICD-9-CM 729.1) during the 12-month pre-index period, be aged between 18 and 64 years as of the index date, have 12-month continuous enrollment in the pre-index and post-index periods, and have 31+ total duloxetine or pregabalin supply days over the entire 12-month post-index period. Duloxetine initiators with a diagnosis of diabetic peripheral neuropathic pain (ICD-9CM 250.6x, 357.2x) or depression (ICD-9-CM 296.2x, 296.3x, 300.4x, 309.1x, or 311.xx) during the 12-month pre-index period were excluded. Pregabalin patients with a diagnosis of diabetic peripheral neuropathic pain, post-herpetic neuralgia (ICD-9-CM 053.11, 053.12, 053.19), or epilepsy (ICD-9-CM 345.xx) over the 12-month pre-index period were also excluded. As in the previous study,35,36 propensity score stratification was applied to construct duloxetine and pregabalin cohorts with similar demographics, health plan types, geographic regions, comorbid medical conditions, prior health care costs, and prior select medication history (ie, antidepressants, anticonvulsants, opioids, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, sleep and antianxiety medications, skeletal muscle relaxants, dopamine agonists, topical agents, and 5-HT3 antagonists). A logistic regression predicting the probability of initiating duloxetine versus pregabalin was estimated first. The predicted probability of duloxetine initiation was ranked for all individuals from highest to lowest into 10 strata, so that cross-cohort differences in all intend-to-adjusted variables were not statistically significant at stratum 2 through 9 (based on paired two-tailed t-tests for means and proportions). Duloxetine and pregabalin patients in the top or bottom stratum were further excluded because they had the most different characteristics. The sample selection flow chart is described in Figure 1. We started with 104,004 duloxetine initiators and 70,137 pregabalin initiators in 2006. The final study sample included 3711 duloxetine patients and 4111 pregabalin patients, respectively.
Figure 1

Sample selection flow chart.

Abbreviations: DPNP, diabetic peripheral neuropathic pain; PHN, post-herpetic neuralgia.

Common reasons for inpatient and outpatient services

For both duloxetine and pregabalin patients, Urix’s RiskSmart software was used to identify all the medical conditions captured in claims collected over the 12-month post-index period. This RiskSmart software applies a comprehensive disease classification system that automatically organizes comprehensive ICD-9-CM codes (more than 15,000) recorded in administrative claims database into 781 homogeneous clinical categories (DxGroups).36 Using the same software, all claims from inpatient admissions, outpatient hospital services, physician office services, and emergency room were processed separately. DxGroups generated from each process were used to identify reasons leading to inpatient admissions, physician office visits, outpatient hospital visits, and emergency room visits, respectively. For all claims collected from physician office visits, primary care (eg, family medicine, internal medicine, pediatrician) versus specialty care (eg, pain medicine and other non-primary care medicine fields) visits were further separated based on physician specialties. Claims from primary versus specialty care visits were examined respectively, and DxGroups were used to identify the reasons leading to each type of visit.

Analysis

For patients in the duloxetine and pregabalin cohorts, the propensity score-adjusted demographics and health care costs (total, inpatient, outpatient, and pharmacy) over the 12-month pre-index period were examined to show the similarities between groups.35 Propensity score-adjusted health care costs over the 12-month post-index period were compared between the duloxetine and pregabalin patients to identify what contributed most to the cross-cohort cost differences.35 Mapping the first diagnosis from each inpatient, outpatient hospital, physician office visit, and emergency room claim captured over the 12-month post-index period into a DxGroup category, we examined the most common reasons for inpatient admissions, physician office visits, outpatient hospital visits, and emergency room visits, respectively. Using physician specialty to distinguish further between primary versus specialty care visits for all the claims submitted for physician office visits, the first diagnosis from each claim was mapped into a DxGroup category to analyze the most common reasons leading to primary versus specialty care visits. The prevalence per 10,000 persons of inpatient admissions, outpatient hospital visits, physician office visits, emergency room visits, and primary and specialty care visits were compared between the duloxetine and pregabalin cohorts. Logistic regression was used to assess further the incremental contribution of duloxetine versus pregabalin initiation (odds ratio from the logistic regression) to inpatient admissions, outpatient hospital visits, physician office visits, emergency room visits, and primary and specialty care visits, controlling for cross-cohort differences. All analyses were performed using SAS version 9.1 (SAS Institute, Cary, NC). P values <0.05 were considered to be statistically significant.

Results

Per study design, both duloxetine and pregabalin patients had similar demographics (mean age 51 years, 83% females) and health care costs over the 12-month pre-index period (Figure 2). However, duloxetine patients had significantly lower total costs ($19,378 versus $27,045) than pregabalin patients during the 12-month post-index period, with most of the cost difference from outpatient services ($7,552 versus $10,643) followed by inpatient services ($2351 versus $4868, all P values <0.05).
Figure 2

Health care costs over the 12-month pre-index (A) and post-index (B) periods.

The most common reasons for inpatient admissions are presented in Table 1 for both the duloxetine and pregabalin patients. Both cohorts shared eight of the 10 most common reasons, and three of the top five reasons were the same, ie, intervertebral disc disorders (herniated, prolapsed, degenerated disc), osteoarthritis of lower leg (knee), and chest pain. Compared with the pregabalin patients, duloxetine patients were less likely to be hospitalized due to an intervertebral disc disorder, major depressive disorder, or spondylosis and allied disorders, eg, osteoarthritis of spine (odds ratios 0.443, 0.808, and 0.355, respectively), but more likely to be admitted to hospital due to intestinal obstruction (odds ratio 3.229, all P < 0.05).
Table 1

Top reasons for inpatient admissions in the 12-month post-index period

DuloxetinePregabalinOdds ratio


RankRates per 10,000^RankRates per 10,000^
Intervertebral disc disorders (herniated, prolapsed, degenerated disc)1598112890.443*
Osteoarthritis of lower leg (knee)257834461.385
Chest pain349825540.796
Coronary atherosclerosis and other ischemic heart disease443873131.725
Other and unspecified pneumonia5319102531.274
Stomach, intestinal disorders, symptoms excluding obstruction, ulcer, and hemorrhage627993010.825
Spinal stenosis723953610.742
Major depressive disorders823963610.808*
Cellulitis, abscess, other local skin infection9239151931.439
Intestinal obstruction1021947843.229*
Spondylosis and allied disorders (osteoarthritis of spine)2013943980.355*
Poisoning by (unintentional) provider or patient medication error3012083130.469

Notes:

10,000 times the number of inpatient admissions divided by number of individuals in the cohort. Bold text designates reason in the top ten;

odds ratio, from the logistic regression predicting any inpatient admission controlling for cross-cohort differences;

statistically significant P < 0.05.

Table 2 summarizes the leading reasons for physician office visits by patients in both the duloxetine and pregabalin cohorts. All top reasons were shared, with physician office visits due to soft tissue disorders (eg, tendonitis bursitis, muscle tissue disorder) being the most common reason in both cohorts, followed by nonspecific backache/other back/neck pain (NB/OB/NP) disorders. Controlling for cross-cohort differences, duloxetine patients were less likely than pregabalin patients to have physician office visits due to NB/OB/NP or an intervertebral disc disorder (odds ratios 0.689 and 0.622, respectively, both P < 0.05).
Table 2

Top reasons for physician office visits in the 12-month post-index period

DuloxetinePregabalinOdds ratio


RankRates per 10,000^RankRates per 10,000^
Disorders of soft tissue (eg, tendonitis, bursitis, muscle disorders)15922161230.911
Nonspecific backache/other back/neck pain/disorders23983254980.689*
Screening/observation/special examinations33396531010.987
Other general symptoms43366334851.031
Arthropathy/joint disorders, derangements, joint pain/stiffness, excluding gout53034433480.962
Acute nose/throat infection (eg, common cold)62830727141.037
Vaccination/medical examination, other preventive72504924691.065
Essential hypertension82463826261.052
Disorders of lipoid metabolism (high cholesterol), except lipidoses922021021971.075
Screening for malignant neoplasm1021561119051.092
Intervertebral disc disorders (herniated, prolapsed, degenerated disc)111724630520.622*

Notes:

10,000 times the number of physician office visits divided by number of individuals in the cohort. Bold text designates reason in the top ten;

odds ratio, from the logistic regression predicting any physician office visit controlling for cross-cohort differences;

statistically significant P < 0.05.

Eight of the 10–11 most common reasons for outpatient hospital visits were shared by both the duloxetine and pregabalin cohorts (Table 3). The top three reasons were the same, with other general symptoms being the most common reason followed by soft tissue and NB/OB/NP disorders. Controlling for cross-cohort differences, duloxetine patients were more likely to make an outpatient visit due to other general symptoms (odds ratios 1.428), but less likely to make an outpatient visit due to asthma (except chronic obstructive pulmonary disease) or upper limb neuropathy, eg, carpal tunnel syndrome (odds ratios 0.914 and 0.491, respectively, all P < 0.05).
Table 3

Top reasons for outpatient hospital visits in the 12-month post-index period

DuloxetinePregabalinOdds ratio


RankRates per 10,000^RankRates per 10,000^
Other general symptoms12954122201.428*
Disorders of soft tissue (eg, tendonitis, bursitis, muscle disorders)2954310010.946
Nonspecific backache/other back/neck pain/disorders3940213830.737
Type 2 diabetes without complications466257370.884
Arthropathy/joint disorders, derangements, joint pain/stiffness, excluding gout557066460.903
Intervertebral disc disorders (herniated, prolapsed, degenerated disc)646447640.659
Emphysema/chronic bronchitis743774281.067
Osteoarthritis, not specified to be spine, hip, or knee8397102641.722
Sprains9358112641.334
Asthma, except chronic obstructive10225122270.914*
 Neuropathy of upper limb (eg, carpal tunnel syndrome)1221283460.491*
 Spinal stenosis1715992910.644

Notes:

10,000 times the number of outpatient hospital visits divided by number of individuals in the cohort. Bold text designates reason in the top ten;

odds ratio, from the logistic regression predicting any outpatient hospital visit controlling for cross-cohort differences;

statistically significant P < 0.05.

Table 4 shows the most common reasons for emergency room visits by patients in the duloxetine and pregabalin cohorts. Both cohorts shared all the leading reasons, with the top eight being the same. Chest pain was the leading reason for emergency room visits, with the prevalence rate per 10,000 being 1347 for duloxetine and 1404 for pregabalin. The duloxetine cohort had lower raw emergency room rates than the pregabalin cohort (columns 2 and 4) for all reasons listed except abdominal/pelvic symptoms, contusion/superficial injury, or migraine headaches. However, none of the predictors of any emergency room visit controlling for cross-cohort differences were statistically significant.
Table 4

Top reasons for emergency room visits in the 12-month post-index period

DuloxetinePregabalinOdds ratio


RankRates per 10,000^RankRates per 10,000^
Chest pain11347114040.958
Abdominal/pelvis symptoms21313312401.006
Contusion/superficial injury3115349851.183
Nonspecific backache/other back/neck pain/disorders4925212760.83
Sprains592559301.077
Headache excluding migraine675368660.949
Disorders of soft tissue (eg, tendonitis, bursitis, muscle disorders)771978020.88
Stomach/intestinal disorders/symptoms, except obstruction, ulcer, and hemorrhage860587660.795
Migraine headaches9594115201.133
Other general symptoms1057196471.109
 Arthropathy/joint disorders, derangements, joint pain/stiffness, excluding gout11525105740.861

Notes:

10,000 times the number of emergency room visits divided by number of individuals in the cohort. Bold text designates reason in the top ten;

odds ratio, from the logistic regression predicting any emergency room visits controlling for cross-cohort differences.

Nine of the 10 most common reasons for primary care visits were the same for both the duloxetine and pregabalin patients, with soft tissue disorders being the leading one (Table 5). The prevalence of primary care visits due to essential hypertension (duloxetine 2375 per 10,000, third ranking; pregabalin 2366 per 10,000, fourth ranking) or NB/OB/NP (duloxetine 1940 per 10,000, seventh ranking; pregabalin 2570 per 10,000, second ranking) disorders was high. Controlling for cross-cohort differences, duloxetine patients were more likely to make primary care visits due to soft tissue disorders, essential hypertension, other general symptoms, or malaise and fatigue, including chronic fatigue syndrome (odds ratios 1.115, 1.160, 1.142, and 1,227, respectively) than pregabalin patients, but less likely to seek primacy care due to NB/OB/NP or type 2 diabetes without complications (odds ratios 0.836 and 0.833, respectively, all P < 0.05).
Table 5

Top reasons for primary care visits in 12-month post-index period

DuloxetinePregabalinOdds ratio


RankRates per 10,000^RankRates per 10,000^
Disorders of soft tissue (eg, tendonitis, bursitis, muscle disorders)13667132961.115*
Acute nose/throat infection (eg, common cold)22592324941.043
Essential hypertension32375423661.160*
Vaccination/medical examination, other preventive42273522611.054
Other general symptoms52248621551.142*
Disorders of lipoid metabolism (high cholesterol), except lipidoses61965719991.029
Nonspecific backache/other back/neck pain/disorders71940225700.836*
Arthropathy/joint disorders, derangements, joint pain/stiffness, excluding gout81534815091.105
Malaise and fatigue, including chronic fatigue syndrome913411310971.227*
Acute or unspecific bronchitis bronchiolitis101170912561.011
Type 2 diabetes without complications149311011660.833*

Notes:

10,000 times the number of primary care visits divided by number of individuals in the cohort. Bold text designates reason in the top ten;

odds ratio, from the logistic regression predicting any primary care visit controlling for cross-cohort differences;

statistically significant P < 0.05.

Table 6 shows the leading reasons for specialty care visits for patients in both the duloxetine and pregabalin cohorts. Nine of the main reasons for specialty care visits were the same in both cohorts, and soft tissue disorders were the most common reason leading to a specialty care visit. The duloxetine cohort had lower raw specialty care rates than the pregabalin cohort for all reasons listed, except screening for a malignant neoplasm or screening, observation, and special examinations. Controlling for cross-cohort differences, duloxetine patients were more likely to make a specialty care visit due to screening for a malignant neoplasm (odds ratio 1.132), but were less likely to attend to specialty care due to a soft tissue, NB/OB/NP, or intervertebral disc disorder, or for spondylosis or an allied disorder (odds ratios 0.835, 0.693, 0.629, and 0.719, respectively, all P < 0.05).
Table 6

Top reasons for specialty care visits in the 12-month post-index period

DuloxetinePregabalinOdds ratio


RankRates per 10,000^RankRates per 10,000^
Disorders of soft tissue (eg, tendonitis, bursitis, muscle disorders)13895144490.835*
Screening for malignant neoplasm23367528251.132*
Screening/observation/special exams33049330310.904
Nonspecific backache/other back/neck pain/disorders43046244020.693*
Arthropathy/joint disorders, derangements, joint pain/stiffness, excluding gout52456627860.939
Other general symptoms62415726930.935
Intervertebral disc disorders (herniated, prolapsed, degenerated disc)71742430310.629*
Abdominal/pelvis symptoms81672817611.024
Chest pain91395916580.928
Stomach/intestinal disorders/symptoms, except obstruction, ulcer, and hemorrhage1012021113060.959
Spondylosis and allied disorders (osteoarthritis of spine)148431014360.719*

Notes:

10,000 times the number of specialty care visits divided by number of individuals in the cohort. Bold text designates reason in the top ten;

odds ratio, from the logistic regression predicting any specialty care visit controlling for cross-cohort differences;

statistically significant P < 0.05.

Discussion

Using a large US administrative claims database on similar commercially insured patients with fibromyalgia who initiated duloxetine or pregabalin in 2006, this study was the first to use a comprehensive disease classification to examine the most common reasons leading to inpatient admissions, physician office visits, outpatient hospital visits, emergency room visits, and primary care and specialty care visits. Although duloxetine patients had significantly lower total health care costs than pregabalin patients over the 12-month post-index periods, with most of the cost difference from outpatient services followed by inpatient services (for a detailed discussion, please see our previous publication),35 patients in both cohorts shared eight or nine of the top 10 most common reasons for inpatient admissions and outpatient visits. The top three leading reasons for inpatient admissions and outpatient hospital visits, top five reasons for physician office visits, and top eight reasons for emergency room visits were the same for both duloxetine and pregabalin patients. This study had several interesting findings. First, soft tissue disorders were the leading reason for physician office visits, including both primary and specialty care visits; it was also one of the most common reasons for outpatient hospital visits (ranked second for duloxetine, and third for pregabalin) and emergency room visits (seventh ranking for both duloxetine and pregabalin). Controlling for cross-cohort differences, duloxetine patients were more likely to have a primary care visit due to soft tissue disorders than pregabalin patients. Given its high prevalence in various health care encounters and different use of primary care versus specialty care setting, future research may need to explore further how soft tissue disorders are treated in real-world practice when managing fibromyalgia. Second, the prevalence rate for NB/OB/NP was very high across the care settings, ie, the second most common reason for physician office visits, the third (duloxetine) and second (pregabalin) leading reason for outpatient hospital visits, the seventh (duloxetine) and second (pregabalin) most common reason for primary care visits, and the fourth (duloxetine) and second (pregabalin) leading reason for specialty care visits. Controlling for cross-cohort differences, duloxetine patients were less likely to go to the physician’s office in either the primary or specialty care setting due to NB/OB/NP than were pregabalin patients. The higher physician office use of NB/OB/NP among pregabalin patients may impact health care costs, and further research might be warranted. Third, intervertebral disc disorder was the leading cause of inpatient admissions for both duloxetine and pregabalin patients, and its prevalence was also high for outpatient visits (duloxetine sixth, pregabalin fourth), specialty care (duloxetine seventh, pregabalin fourth), and physician office visits (duloxetine eleventh, pregabalin sixth). Controlling for cross-cohort differences, duloxetine patients were less likely than pregabalin patients to go to each of the care settings mentioned above, except for outpatient hospital visits. Why intervertebral disc disorder is managed differently between duloxetine and pregabalin patients and how the different use of health care systems may impact health care costs needs to be examined in future studies. Lastly, chest pain was the most common reason for emergency room visits by patients in both cohorts, and it was also the main reason for inpatient admissions (third and second for duloxetine and pregabalin, respectively), and specialty care visits (ninth for both duloxetine and pregabalin). The prevalence was similar between the cohorts, and no statistically significant result was found controlling for cross-cohort differences. Because inpatient admissions and emergency room visits are costly, managing the top reasons leading to emergency room visits as well as hospitalization effectively may potentially reduce overall health care costs. This study has several limitations. First, because of its retrospective design, this analysis can only describe the different reasons leading to inpatient and outpatient care. What caused the different use in the different care settings could be not identified. Second, ICD-9-CM diagnosis codes were used to identify all medical conditions captured in the administrative claims database. Therefore, medical conditions not recorded anywhere in the database analyzed here were not recognized. Third, all patients included were from a large, geographically diverse commercial population covered by large employer-sponsored private health insurance, so findings from this study may not be generalizable to other populations with different characteristics. Fourth, non-pharmacological management for fibromyalgia was not addressed in this study, so its impact on inpatient and outpatient care is unknown. Finally, all patients were required to have continuous enrollment during the 12-month pre-index and post-index periods. Any patients who dropped out of the health plan anytime before or after the index date were not included.

Conclusion

Among similar commercially insured patients with fibromyalgia, those initiated on duloxetine had significantly lower health care costs over the 12-month post-index period than those who initiated pregabalin. The leading reasons for inpatient or outpatient visits were also somewhat different.
  32 in total

1.  The incidence of fibromyalgia and its associated comorbidities: a population-based retrospective cohort study based on International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision codes.

Authors:  Peter T Weir; Gregory A Harlan; Flo L Nkoy; Spencer S Jones; Kurt T Hegmann; Lisa H Gren; Joseph L Lyon
Journal:  J Clin Rheumatol       Date:  2006-06       Impact factor: 3.517

2.  Death of a lifestyle: the effects of social support and healthcare support on the quality of life of persons with fibromyalgia and/or chronic fatigue syndrome.

Authors:  Nancy Schoofs; Deborah Bambini; Pamela Ronning; Emily Bielak; Jennie Woehl
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3.  Assessment of anxiety and quality of life in fibromyalgia patients.

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Journal:  Sao Paulo Med J       Date:  2005-02-02       Impact factor: 1.044

4.  Elements of fibromyalgia in an open population.

Authors:  T Schochat; H Raspe
Journal:  Rheumatology (Oxford)       Date:  2003-03-31       Impact factor: 7.580

5.  The prevalence and meaning of fatigue in rheumatic disease.

Authors:  F Wolfe; D J Hawley; K Wilson
Journal:  J Rheumatol       Date:  1996-08       Impact factor: 4.666

6.  Effects of depression and anxiety on quality of life of patients with rheumatoid arthritis, knee osteoarthritis and fibromyalgia syndrome.

Authors:  A Ozcetin; S Ataoglu; E Kocer; S Yazici; O Yildiz; A Ataoglul; C Icmeli
Journal:  West Indian Med J       Date:  2007-03       Impact factor: 0.171

7.  The prevalence and characteristics of fibromyalgia in the general population.

Authors:  F Wolfe; K Ross; J Anderson; I J Russell; L Hebert
Journal:  Arthritis Rheum       Date:  1995-01

8.  The American College of Rheumatology 1990 Criteria for the Classification of Fibromyalgia. Report of the Multicenter Criteria Committee.

Authors:  F Wolfe; H A Smythe; M B Yunus; R M Bennett; C Bombardier; D L Goldenberg; P Tugwell; S M Campbell; M Abeles; P Clark
Journal:  Arthritis Rheum       Date:  1990-02

Review 9.  EULAR evidence-based recommendations for the management of fibromyalgia syndrome.

Authors:  S F Carville; L Arendt-Nielsen; S Arendt-Nielsen; H Bliddal; F Blotman; J C Branco; D Buskila; J A P Da Silva; B Danneskiold-Samsøe; F Dincer; C Henriksson; K G Henriksson; E Kosek; K Longley; G M McCarthy; S Perrot; M Puszczewicz; P Sarzi-Puttini; A Silman; M Späth; E H Choy
Journal:  Ann Rheum Dis       Date:  2007-07-20       Impact factor: 19.103

10.  Fibromyalgia, systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), and evaluation of SLE activity.

Authors:  Frederick Wolfe; Michelle Petri; Graciela S Alarcón; John Goldman; Eliza F Chakravarty; Robert S Katz; Elizabeth W Karlson
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