OBJECTIVE: To provide Canadian estimates of health care utilization costs associated with rheumatoid arthritis (RA)-related and non-RA-related care within 4 treatment strategies and in different physical functioning categories. METHODS: In the Alberta Rheumatoid Arthritis Biologics Pharmacosurveillance Program, clinical data were linked with provincial health care administrative databases to estimate health care costs. A propensity score matching technique was used to evaluate annual costs across 4 treatment strategies: 1) remaining on disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs and not progressing to therapy with a biologic agent (n = 75), 2) progressing to biologic agents (n = 68), 3) initiation and stabilization on a first anti-tumor necrosis factor agent (n = 731), or 4) requiring a switch to another biologic agent (n = 212). Costs were examined across levels of function and by cost attribution category (directly related to RA or not). RESULTS: Of 1,222 patients, 1,086 had at least 3 months of administrative data. The mean annual total cost per patient was $5,531 (median $2,568), and $2,349 (median $0) was accounted for by hospitalizations, $1,716 (median $1,358) by physician visits, and $1,465 (median $949) by emergency room and other outpatient visits. Of these costs, 41% was directly related to RA itself or associated comorbidities. The importance of physical function as a determinant of health care utilization was evident, with the annual mean cost for those with low functional disability as measured by a Health Assessment Questionnaire (HAQ) score <0.5 was $4,157 compared to $14,225 for those with a HAQ score >2.0 indicating high disability. CONCLUSION: Health care costs for RA can be minimized by aiming for better disease control and maintaining physical function.
OBJECTIVE: To provide Canadian estimates of health care utilization costs associated with rheumatoid arthritis (RA)-related and non-RA-related care within 4 treatment strategies and in different physical functioning categories. METHODS: In the Alberta Rheumatoid Arthritis Biologics Pharmacosurveillance Program, clinical data were linked with provincial health care administrative databases to estimate health care costs. A propensity score matching technique was used to evaluate annual costs across 4 treatment strategies: 1) remaining on disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs and not progressing to therapy with a biologic agent (n = 75), 2) progressing to biologic agents (n = 68), 3) initiation and stabilization on a first anti-tumornecrosis factor agent (n = 731), or 4) requiring a switch to another biologic agent (n = 212). Costs were examined across levels of function and by cost attribution category (directly related to RA or not). RESULTS: Of 1,222 patients, 1,086 had at least 3 months of administrative data. The mean annual total cost per patient was $5,531 (median $2,568), and $2,349 (median $0) was accounted for by hospitalizations, $1,716 (median $1,358) by physician visits, and $1,465 (median $949) by emergency room and other outpatient visits. Of these costs, 41% was directly related to RA itself or associated comorbidities. The importance of physical function as a determinant of health care utilization was evident, with the annual mean cost for those with low functional disability as measured by a Health Assessment Questionnaire (HAQ) score <0.5 was $4,157 compared to $14,225 for those with a HAQ score >2.0 indicating high disability. CONCLUSION: Health care costs for RA can be minimized by aiming for better disease control and maintaining physical function.
Authors: Morgan Schultz; Stephanie O Keeling; Steven J Katz; Walter P Maksymowych; Dean T Eurich; Jill J Hall Journal: Clin Rheumatol Date: 2017-05-27 Impact factor: 2.980
Authors: Mark Tatangelo; George Tomlinson; J Michael Paterson; Edward Keystone; Nick Bansback; Claire Bombardier Journal: PLoS One Date: 2021-05-06 Impact factor: 3.240
Authors: Nathan Vastesaeger; Abraham Garcia Kutzbach; Howard Amital; Karel Pavelka; María Alicia Lazaro; Robert J Moots; Jürgen Wollenhaupt; Cristiano A F Zerbini; Ingrid Louw; Bernard Combe; Andre Beaulieu; Hendrik Schulze-Koops; Bhaskar Dasgupta; Bo Fu; Susan Huyck; Haoling H Weng; Marinella Govoni; Patrick Durez Journal: Rheumatology (Oxford) Date: 2016-04-25 Impact factor: 7.580