| Literature DB >> 28237961 |
Annamaria Colao1, Marcello Lucchese2, Monica D'Adamo3, Silvia Savastano1, Enrico Facchiano2, Chiara Veronesi4, Valerio Blini4, Luca Degli Esposti4, Paolo Sbraccia3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Investigate the prevalence of obesity in Italy and examine its resource consumption and economic impact on the Italian national healthcare system (NHS).Entities:
Keywords: Body mass index; Healthcare resource consumption; Obesity; Real-life study; Retrospective
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28237961 PMCID: PMC5337671 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-013899
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Baseline characteristics and demographics at the index date
| Weight | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Under (BMI <18.5) | Normal (BMI ≥18.5 to <25) | Over (BMI ≥25 to <30) | Obese (BMI ≥30) | Total | |
| Patients, n (%) | 457 (2.3) | 7686 (38.1) | 7545 (37.4) | 4471 (22.2) | 20 159 (100) |
| Males:females, n:n | 67:390 | 2977:4709 | 3996:3549 | 2048:2423 | 9088:11 071 |
| Mean age±SD, years | 44.6±20.4* | 53.6±17.2† | 59.3±15.2‡ | 58.1±15.1 | 56.5±16.4 |
*p<0.001 vs normal weight, overweight and obese.
†p<0.001 vs overweight and obese.
‡p<0.001 vs obese.
BMI, body mass index; SD, standard deviation.
Proportions of patients classified as being of normal weight, overweight and obese, stratified by age at the index date
| Prevalence | Normal weight | Overweight | Obese | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 18–29 years, n (%) | 743 (62.0)* | 267 (22.3)* | 189 (15.8)* | 1199 (100.0) |
| 30–64 years, n (%) | 4701 (40.8)† | 4195 (36.4)† | 2627 (22.8)† | 11 523 (100.0) |
| 65+ years, n (%) | 2242 (32.1) | 3083 (44.2) | 1655 (23.7) | 6980 (100.0) |
| Total | 7686 | 7545 | 4471 |
*p<0.0001 vs 30–64 years and +65 years.
†p<0.0001 vs +65 years.
Figure 1Patients exposed to treatment, by BMI category and drug class, during (A) the 1-year observation period and (B) the period up to data cut-off. (A) *p<0.001 vs overweight and obese subjects; †p<0.001 vs obese subjects. (B) *p<0.001 vs overweight and obese subjects; †p<0.001 vs obese subjects. BMI, body mass index.
Figure 2Mean annual costs per surviving individual, by BMI category, during (A) the 1-year observation period and (B) the period up to data cut-off. (A) Overall costs: p<0.001 vs overweight and obese subjects; p<0.01 vs grade I and grade II obese subjects. Drug costs: p<0.001, p<0.01; Hospitalisation costs: p<0.01, p=NS; Outpatient costs: p<0.01, p=NS. (B) Overall costs: p<0.001 vs overweight and obese subjects; p<0.01 vs grade I and grade II obese subjects. Drug costs: p<0.001, p=NS; Hospitalisation costs: p<0.001, p=NS; Outpatient costs: p<0.001, p<0.05. BMI, body mass index.
Figure 3Mean cost according to age and BMI. BMI, body mass index.