| Literature DB >> 25393221 |
Sarah A Collier, Michael P Gronostaj, Amanda K MacGurn, Jennifer R Cope, Kate L Awsumb, Jonathan S Yoder, Michael J Beach.
Abstract
Keratitis, inflammation of the cornea, can result in partial or total loss of vision and can result from infectious agents (e.g., microbes including bacteria, fungi, amebae, and viruses) or from noninfectious causes (e.g., eye trauma, chemical exposure, and ultraviolet exposure). Contact lens wear is the major risk factor for microbial keratitis; outbreaks of Fusarium and Acanthamoeba keratitis have been associated with contact lens multipurpose solution use, and poor contact lens hygiene is a major risk factor for a spectrum of eye complications, including microbial keratitis and other contact lens-related inflammation. However, the overall burden and the epidemiology of keratitis in the United States have not been well described. To estimate the incidence and cost of keratitis, national ambulatory-care and emergency department databases were analyzed. The results of this analysis showed that an estimated 930,000 doctor's office and outpatient clinic visits and 58,000 emergency department visits for keratitis or contact lens disorders occur annually; 76.5% of keratitis visits result in antimicrobial prescriptions. Episodes of keratitis and contact lens disorders cost an estimated $175 million in direct health care expenditures, including $58 million for Medicare patients and $12 million for Medicaid patients each year. Office and outpatient clinic visits occupied over 250,000 hours of clinician time annually. Developing effective prevention messages that are disseminated to contact lens users and investigation of additional preventive efforts are important measures to reduce the national incidence of microbial keratitis.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25393221 PMCID: PMC5779494
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep ISSN: 0149-2195 Impact factor: 17.586
Estimated episode characteristics and cost of visits to doctor’s offices, outpatient clinics, and emergency departments involving keratitis-related diagnostic codes — United States, 2010*
| Cost per visit | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Diagnosis | Median no. of visits per episode (range) | Median episode length (range) | Doctor’s office/Outpatient clinic ($) | Emergency department ($) |
| Corneal disorder due to contact lens (ICD-9-CM code 371.82) | 1 (1–10) | 1 day (1–343) | 104 | 505 |
| Keratitis (370.0, 370.8, 370.9) | 1 (1–49) | 1 day (1–359) | 157 | 622 |
| Corneal ulcer (370.0) | 2 (1–48) | 3 days (1–359) | 155 | 658 |
| Other forms of keratitis (370.8) | 1 (1–18) | 1 day (1–345) | 247 | 672 |
| Unspecified keratitis (370.9) | 1 (1–25) | 1 day (1–359) | 152 | 564 |
| Any contact lens or keratitis related diagnosis (371.82, 370.0, 370.8, 370.9) | 1 (1–49) | 1 day (1–359) | 151 | 587 |
Abbreviation: ICD-9-CM = International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification.
Source: Marketscan Commercial Claims and Encounters and Medicare Supplemental and Multistate Medicaid databases.
Estimated number of visits to doctor’s offices, outpatient clinics, and emergency departments for keratitis-related diagnostic codes — United States, 2010
| Diagnosis | No. of doctor’s office/Outpatient clinic visits | No. of emergency department visits |
|---|---|---|
| Corneal disorder due to contact lens (ICD-9-CM code 371.82) | 230,000 (130,000–340,000) | 19,000 (14,000–25,000) |
| Keratitis (370.0, 370.8, 370.9) | 700,000 (510,000–890,000) | 41,000 (30,000–52,000) |
| Corneal ulcer (370.0) | 280,000 (170,000–390,000) | 25,000 (18,000–33,000) |
| Other forms of keratitis (370.8) | — | 7,000 (3,000–12,000) |
| Unspecified keratitis (370.9) | 380,000 (250,000–520,000) | 8,000 (7,000–9,000) |
| Any contact lens or keratitis related diagnosis (371.82, 370.0, 370.8, 370.9) | 930,000 (690,000–1,170,000) | 58,000 (43,000–72,000) |
Abbreviations: ICD-9-CM = International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification; CI = confidence interval.
Source: 2006–2010 National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey/National Hospital Ambulatory Care Medical Survey of Outpatient Departments.
Source: 2010 Nationwide Emergency Department Sample.
Data not reported because of small sample size.
Estimated total annual cost of visits in millions of dollars, by insurance source, to doctor’s offices, outpatient clinics, and emergency departments involving keratitis-related diagnostic codes — United States, 2010*
| Insurance source (millions of $) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| Diagnosis | Private | Medicare | Medicaid | Other | Total |
| Corneal disorder due to contact lens (ICD-9-CM code 371.82) | 21.5 | 3.9 | 4.6 | 3.6 |
|
| Keratitis (370.0, 370.8, 370.9) | 62.5 | 49.3 | 5.4 | 18.0 |
|
| Any contact lens or keratitis related diagnosis (371.82, 370.0, 370.8, 370.9) | 83.8 | 58.0 | 11.9 | 21.2 |
|
Abbreviation: ICD-9-CM = International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification.
Sources: 2006–2010 National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey/National Hospital Ambulatory Care Medical Survey of Outpatient Departments, 2010 Nationwide Emergency Department Sample, and 2010 Marketscan Commercial Claims and Encounters, Medicare Supplemental and Multistate Medicaid databases.
Includes patients with other types of insurance (e.g., Tricare, the military health plan), uninsured patients, and patients with an unknown source of insurance.
The amount for any diagnosis does not equal the sum of visits with a corneal disorder caused by contact lens use diagnosis and visits with a keratitis diagnosis because approximately 1% of office visits and 4% of emergency department visits involved both categories of diagnosis codes.