| Literature DB >> 26746477 |
Freek J B Lötters1, Joop P van den Bergh2,3, Frank de Vries3,4,5,6, Maureen P M H Rutten-van Mölken7.
Abstract
This study aims to estimate the incidence and costs of osteoporosis-related fractures in The Netherlands in 2010 and project them to 2030. The incidence and costs of five different types of fractures (spine, hip, upper extremity, lower extremity, wrist/distal forearm, other) were derived from claims data of all Dutch healthcare insurers. Given that fracture-codes in claims data do not indicate whether fractures are related to osteoporosis, we used a large dataset with DXA measurements to attribute fractures to osteoporosis. Future projections used four scenarios: (1) demographic, (2) demographic + annual trend in incidence rates, (3) demographic + annual trend in incidence rates + annual trend in costs, and (4) treatment. Of all registered fractures, 32 % was attributed to osteoporosis (36 % in women and 21 % in men). Over time (2010-2030) the increase in incidence of osteoporosis-related fractures was estimated to be 40 % (scenario 1); for the hip 60-79 % (scenario 1-2). In 2010, approximately €200 million was spent on treatment of osteoporosis-related fractures, most on fractures of the hip followed by wrist/distal forearm. In both men and women, the excess costs due to osteoporosis-related fractures were highest for hip fractures (€11,000-€13,000 per person), followed by spine fractures (€6000-€7000).The costs for osteoporosis-related fractures were projected to increase with 50 % from 2010 to 2030 (scenario 1); for the hip 60-148 % (scenario 1-3). Pharmacotherapeutic prevention can lead to cost-savings of €377 million in 2030 (scenario 1 and 4 combined). The projected increase in incidence and costs of osteoporosis-related fractures calls for a wider use of prevention and treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Costs; Fractures; Future projections; Incidence; Osteoporosis
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26746477 PMCID: PMC4746227 DOI: 10.1007/s00223-015-0089-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Calcif Tissue Int ISSN: 0171-967X Impact factor: 4.333
Number and percentage of fractures with osteoporosis (T-score ≤ −2.5 at lumbar spine, femoral neck or total hip) by gender and fracture type
| Men | Women | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| % |
| % | |
| Spine | 18 (54) | 33.3 | 65 (123) | 52.8 |
| Hip | 22 (60) | 36.7 | 60 (108) | 55.6 |
| Upper extremity | 24 (137) | 17.5 | 180 (529) | 34.0 |
| wrist/distal forearm | 9 (58) | 15.5 | 100 (285) | 35.1 |
| Lower extremity | 26 (146) | 17.8 | 77 (300) | 25.7 |
| Other | 12 (73) | 16.4 | 44 (109) | 40.4 |
| Total | 111 (528) | 21.0 | 526 (1454) | 36.2 |
n = Number of fractures attributed to osteoporosis based on T-score of DXA; N = total number of fractures
Incidence of all fractures and osteoporosis-related fractures, by gender and fracture type, in 2010
| Fracture type | All fractures | Osteoporosis-related fractures (absolute) | Osteoporosis-related fractures (/100,000) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male | Spine | 2285 | 761 | 27 |
| Hip | 5219 | 1915 | 69 | |
| Upper extremity | 9924 | 1737 | 62 | |
| Wrist/distal forearm | 5227 | 810 | 29 | |
| Lower extremity | 8461 | 1506 | 54 | |
| Other | 3094 | 507 | 18 | |
| Total | 34,210 | 7236 | 260 | |
| Female | Spine | 4459 | 2354 | 76 |
| Hip | 12,543 | 6974 | 226 | |
| Upper extremity | 20,742 | 7052 | 228 | |
| Wrist/distal forearm | 22,120 | 7764 | 251 | |
| Lower extremity | 20,094 | 5164 | 167 | |
| Other | 5251 | 2121 | 69 | |
| Total | 85,209 | 31,429 | 1018 | |
| Male and Female | Spine | 6744 | 3115 | 53 |
| Hip | 17,762 | 8889 | 151 | |
| Upper extremity | 30,666 | 8789 | 150 | |
| Wrist/distal forearm | 27,347 | 8574 | 146 | |
| Lower extremity | 28,555 | 6670 | 114 | |
| Other | 8345 | 2629 | 45 | |
| Total | 119,419 | 38,666 | 659 |
Fig. 1Projected number of osteoporosis-related fractures over time by type of fracture (in women and men); demographic scenario (d) and demographic trend (d + t) in incidence scenario (only for osteoporosis-related hip fractures)
Annual healthcare costs for osteoporosis-related fractures in 2010
| Fracture type | Mean healthcare costs for a person with a fracture (fracture and non- fracture related)* | Mean healthcare costs for a person without a fracture (non-fracture | %cost related to fractures* | Mean healthcare costs due to osteoporosis-related fracture per | Total healthcare costs due to osteoporosis-related fractures in The Netherlands** | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Men | Spine | €10,786.03 | €3578.88 | 67 | €7207.15 | €5,483,953.08 |
| Hip | €16,708.45 | €4098.85 | 75 | €12,609.60 | €24,152,080.40 | |
| Upper extremity | €5463.60 | €2862.24 | 47 | €2601.35 | €4,517,772.00 | |
| Wrist/distal forearm | €4751,15 | €3005.04 | 37 | €1746.11 | €1,414,670.73 | |
| Lower extremity | €6301.98 | €2793.01 | 56 | €3508.97 | €5,284,706.88 | |
| Other | €7832.67 | €3167.51 | 60 | €4665.17 | €2,367,180.95 | |
| Total | €43,220,364.04 | |||||
| Women | Spine | €8834.83 | €3258.86 | 63 | €5575.97 | €13,127,801.27 |
| Hip | €14,545.30 | €3534.72 | 76 | €11,010.57 | €76,786,727.38 | |
| Upper extremity | €5610.96 | €2903.45 | 48 | €2707.51 | €19,094,139.49 | |
| Wrist/distal forearm | €4426.40 | €2941.75 | 34 | €1484.65 | €11,527,023.52 | |
| Lower extremity | €6034.66 | €2718.38 | 55 | €3316.27 | €17,125,767.07 | |
| Other | €7603.95 | €3257.15 | 58 | €4346.80 | €9,221,309.75 | |
| Total | €146,882,768.48 | |||||
| Men and Women | Spine | €9495.93 | €3367.29 | 64 | €6128.65 | €18,611,754.35 |
| Hip | €15,180.89 | €3700.48 | 76 | €11,480.41 | €100,938,807.77 | |
| Upper extremity | €5563.27 | €2890.11 | 48 | €2673.16 | €23,611,911.49 | |
| Wrist/distal forearm | €4488.47 | €2953.85 | 34 | €1534.63 | €12,941,694.25 | |
| Lower extremity | €6113.87 | €2740.50 | 55 | €3373.37 | €22,410,473.95 | |
| Other | €7688.75 | €3223.91 | 58 | €4464.84 | €11,588,490.70 | |
| Total | €190,103,132.51 | |||||
* Weighted average over the 5-year age classes within each fracture type
** Determined by the incidence figures presented in Table 2
Fig. 2Costs of osteoporosis-related fractures in 2010 per 100,000 person years in each age class
Fig. 3Estimated costs of osteoporosis-related hip fractures till 2030 (in men and women); demographic scenario, demographic + incidence trend scenario, and demographic + incidence trend + costs trend scenario