Literature DB >> 25253504

Adjusting for comorbidities in cost of illness studies.

John A Rizzo1, Jie Chen, Candace L Gunnarsson, Ahmad Naim, Jennifer H Lofland.   

Abstract

MOTIVATION: Differences in cost of illness (COI) methodological approaches have led to disparate results. This analysis examines two sources of this variation: specification of comorbidities in the estimated cost models and assumed prevalence rates used for generating aggregate costs. The study provides guidance in determining which comorbidities are important to include and how to handle uncertainty in optimal model specification and prevalence rate assumptions.
METHODS: Comorbidities are categorized into four types. Type I comorbidities are those that increase the risk of the disease of interest; Type II comorbidities have no causal link to the disease of interest but are, nonetheless, highly correlated with that disease; Type III comorbidities are illnesses that the disease of interest may cause, and Type IV are comorbidities that have no causal link to the disease of interest and are only weakly correlated with that disease. Two-part models are used to estimate the direct costs of rheumatoid arthritis and diabetes mellitus using 2000-2007 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey data.
RESULTS: COI estimates are sensitive to the specification of comorbidities. The odds of incurring any expenses varies by 71% for diabetes mellitus and by 27% for rheumatoid arthritis, while conditional expenditures (e.g., expenditures among subjects incurring at least some expenditures) vary by 62% and 45%, respectively. Uncertainty in prevalence rates cause costs to vary. A sensitivity analysis estimated the COI for diabetes ranges from $131.7-$172.0 billion, while rheumatoid arthritis varies from $12.8-$26.2 billion.
CONCLUSIONS: The decision to include Type II and Type III comorbidities is crucial in COI studies. Alternative models should be included with and without the Type III comorbidities to gauge the range of cost effects of the disease. In generating costs, alternative values for prevalence rates should be used and a sensitivity analysis should be performed.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cost of illness; Diabetes mellitus; Rheumatoid arthritis

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25253504     DOI: 10.3111/13696998.2014.969434

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Med Econ        ISSN: 1369-6998            Impact factor:   2.448


  7 in total

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2.  The extra cost of comorbidity: multiple illnesses and the economic burden of non-communicable diseases.

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Review 6.  Multimorbidity in chronic disease: impact on health care resources and costs.

Authors:  Steven M McPhail
Journal:  Risk Manag Healthc Policy       Date:  2016-07-05

7.  Adjusting health spending for the presence of comorbidities: an application to United States national inpatient data.

Authors:  Joseph L Dieleman; Ranju Baral; Elizabeth Johnson; Anne Bulchis; Maxwell Birger; Anthony L Bui; Madeline Campbell; Abigail Chapin; Rose Gabert; Hannah Hamavid; Cody Horst; Jonathan Joseph; Liya Lomsadze; Ellen Squires; Martin Tobias
Journal:  Health Econ Rev       Date:  2017-08-29
  7 in total

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