| Literature DB >> 29587714 |
Jacek Wysocki1, Ilona Malecka1, Joanna Stryczynska-Kazubska1, Emmanouil Rampakakis2, Barbara Kuter3, Lara J Wolfson4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The safety and efficacy of live-attenuated varicella zoster virus (VZV) vaccines in preventing varicella and reducing associated morbidity and mortality in real-world have been previously shown. In Poland, VZV vaccination is only mandatory for certain high-risk individuals. Here, we have conducted an evaluation of the clinical and economic burden of varicella in Poland.Entities:
Keywords: Burden of illness; Pediatric; Retrospective studies; Vaccination; Varicella; Varicella vaccine
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29587714 PMCID: PMC5870512 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-018-5298-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Patient and disease characteristics at varicella diagnosis
| Outpatients | Inpatients | |
|---|---|---|
| ( | ( | |
| Patient Characteristics | ||
| Age, years, mean (±SD) | 3.9 (± 2.6) | 4.2 (± 2.3) |
| Gender, n (%) | ||
| Male | 41 (54.7%) | 46 (61.3%) |
| Female | 34 (45.3%) | 29 (38.7%) |
| Area of residence, n (%) | ||
| Urban | 64 (85.3%) | 51 (68.0%) |
| Rural | 7 (9.3%) | 23 (30.7%) |
| BMI, kg/m2, mean (±SD)a | 17.5 ( | 16.4 ( |
| Calendar year of diagnosis, n (%) | ||
| 2010 | 2 (2.7%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| 2011 | 6 (8.0%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| 2012 | 8 (10.7%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| 2013 | 7 (9.3%) | 12 (16.0%) |
| 2014 | 42 (56.0%) | 60 (80.0%) |
| 2015 | 10 (13.3%) | 3 (4.0%) |
| Disease Characteristics | ||
| Maximum number of skin lesions during rashc, n (%) | ||
| < 50 | 25 (33.3%) | 18 (24.0%) |
| 50–249 | 36 (48.0%) | 37 (49.3%) |
| 250–500 | 14 (18.7%) | 12 (16.0%) |
| > 500 | 0 (0.0%) | 8 (10.7%) |
| Patients who were immunocompromisedb, n (%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) |
aCalculations based on data from 31 (41.3%) outpatients and 44 (58.7%) inpatients
bPatients were considered immunocompromised if they had at least one of the following conditions: HIV/AIDS, congenital immunodeficiency, received system steroids, or had any other immunocompromised condition listed in their medical history
cNumber of varicella lesions were either extracted directly from the patient chart, or approximated from physician categorization of the severity of the skin eruption at presentation (low, moderate, severe)
Fig. 1a Types of complications associated with varicella - Percentage of patients with complications*§. b Types of complications associated with varicella - Types of complications - Outpatients†. c Types of complications associated with varicella - Types of complications - Inpatients†‡. * Proportions based on the total number of patients. § Of those experiencing complications, 100% of outpatients had exactly one (n = 75), whereas 25.8% of inpatients experienced more than one complication (n = 16). † Proportions based on the total number of complications. ‡ Inpatients; other includes: sepsis, febrile seizure, and vomiting (3.7%, each); meningitis, coagulation disorder diarrhoea, otitis media, pharyngitis, scarlet fever, and upper respiratory tract infection (2.4%, each); encephalitis, acute osteomyelitis, keratoconjunctivitis, severe pain, anaemia, bronchitis, conjunctivitis, allergic dermatitis, gastritis, loss of consciousness, seizure, syncope, tonsillitis, torticollis, and urticaria (1.2%, each)
Varicella associated healthcare resource utilization (HCRU)
| Type of HCRU | Outpatients ( | Inpatients ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Parameter | % Patients | Mean (95% CI)a | % Patients | Mean (95% CI)a |
| Visits to doctor’s office | 92.0% | 1.3 (1.0, 1.6) | 57.3% | 1.2 (0.9, 1.5) |
| Visits to ER | 12.0% | 1.1 (0.6, 1.9) | 5.3% | 1.0 (N/C) |
| Visits to hospital outpatient clinic | 17.3% | 1.0 (N/C) | 0.0% | N/A |
| Total outpatient visitsb | 100% | 1.2 (1.1, 1.3) | 60.0% | 1.0 (1.0, 1.1) |
| Hospitalization | N/A | N/A | 100% | 4.7 (4.1, 5.3) |
| ICU stay | N/A | N/A | 0.0% | N/A |
| Prescription medications | 80.0% | 1.2 (0.9, 1.4) | 93.3% | 2.1 (1.8, 2.5) |
| OTC medications | 80.0% | 1.7 (1.3, 2.0) | 81.3% | 1.8 (1.5, 2.1) |
| Tests/procedures | 0.0% | N/A | 69.3% | 1.8 (1.5, 2.2) |
| Allied health professional consultations | 0.0% | N/A | 24.0% | 1.1 (0.7, 1.6) |
N/A not applicable, N/C not calculable
aDenotes the average number of times each healthcare resource was used among users; for hospitalization and hospital ICU stay, it denotes the duration of days
bSum of visits to doctor’s office, ER, and hospital outpatient clinic
Key unit costs (PLN / €) for healthcare resources
| Mean Cost | |
|---|---|
| Healthcare resource | |
| Visits to doctor’s officea | PLN 217.6 |
| € 52 | |
| Visits to ERa | PLN 97 |
| € 23 | |
| Visits to hospital outpatient clinicb | PLN 18 |
| € 4 | |
| Hospitalization of varicella case without complicationsa | PLN 2080 |
| € 497 | |
| Hospitalization of varicella case with complicationsa | PLN 4004 |
| € 956 | |
PLN Polish złoty, € Euros
aCost per case using this resource; based on the payments of the National Health Fund to the Regional Hospital Centre for Mother and Child in Poznań, Poland
bCost per visit; based on an average salary for a specialized physician in the public system and an average of 25 patients/day
Cost (PLN / €) per pediatric case of varicella
| Outpatients ( | Inpatients ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean Costa | 95% CI | Mean Costa | 95% CI | |
| Direct Costs | ||||
| Visits to doctor’s office | PLN 200.2 | (186.5, 213.9) | PLN 124.8 | (99.8, 149.7) |
| € 47.8 | (44.6, 51.1) | € 29.8 | (23.9, 35.8) | |
| Visits to ER | PLN 12.9 | (4.5, 21.4) | PLN 5.2 | (0.1, 10.2) |
| € 3.1 | (1.1, 5.1) | € 1.2 | (0.0, 2.4) | |
| Visits to hospital outpatient clinic | PLN 3.1 | (1.5, 4.7) | PLN | |
| € 0.7 | (0.4, 1.1) | € 0.0 | N/A | |
| Hospitalization | PLN | PLN 3671.0 | (N/C) | |
| € N/A | N/A | € 877.3 | ||
| ICU stay | PLN | PLN | N/A | |
| € N/A | N/A | € 0.0 | ||
| Prescription medications | PLN 10.1 | (2.0, 18.2) | PLN 60.1 | (43.4, 76.7) |
| € 2.4 | (0.5, 4.3) | € 14.4 | (10.4, 18.3) | |
| OTC medications | PLN 2.5 | (2.0, 2.9) | PLN 2.0 | (1.5, 2.5) |
| € 0.6 | (0.5, 0.7) | € 0.5 | (0.4, 0.6) | |
| Tests/procedures | PLN | PLN 113.2 | (82.0, 144.3) | |
| € 0.0 | (N/C) | € 27.0 | (19.6, 34.5) | |
| Allied health professional consultations | PLN | PLN 37.3 | (21.4, 53.3) | |
| € 0.0 | (N/C) | € 8.9 | (5.1, 12.7) | |
| Overall direct costs | PLN 228.8 | (214.1, 243.4) | PLN 4013.5 | (3953.1, 4073.9) |
| € 54.7 | (51.2, 58.2) | € 959.2 | (944.8, 973.6) | |
| Indirect Costs | ||||
| Lost work by caregivers | PLN 798.5 | (630.4, 966.5) | PLN 999.8 | (849.3, 1150.2) |
| € 190.8 | (150.7, 231.0) | € 238.9 | (203.0, 274.9) | |
| Total | PLN 1027.2 | (859.5, 1195.0) | PLN 5013.3 | (4820.0, 5206.5) |
| € 245.5 | (205.3, 285.4) | € 1198.1 | (1151.3, 1243.6) | |
PLN Polish złoty, € Euros, N/A not applicable, N/C not calculable
a Mean (95% CI) among all patients. Based on patients with available information
Estimated annual (2015) costs (PLN / €) for children with varicella in Polanda
| Annual Cost (PLN / €) | (%) of Total Direct Cost | |
|---|---|---|
| Direct Costs | ||
| Visits to doctor’s office | PLN 34,429,801.2 | 85.4% |
| € 8,228,526.6 | ||
| Visits to ER | PLN 2,222,763.9 | 5.5% |
| € 531,227.9 | ||
| Visits to outpatient clinic | PLN 535,915.1 | 1.3% |
| € 128,080.6 | ||
| Hospitalization | PLN 1,283,974.3 | 2.3% |
| € 306,862.6 | ||
| ICU stay | PLN | 0.0% |
| € 0.0 | ||
| Prescription medications | PLN 1,750,710.4 | 4.3% |
| € 418,409.8 | ||
| OTC medications | PLN 423,237.4 | 1.0% |
| € 101,151.3 | ||
| Tests/procedures | PLN 39,579.0 | 0.1% |
| € 9459.2 | ||
| Allied health professional consultations | PLN 13,056.6 | 0.0% |
| € 3120.5 | ||
| Total direct costs | PLN 40,699,037.9 | N/A |
| € 9,726,838.6 | ||
| Indirect Costs | ||
| Lost work by caregivers | PLN 137,499,282.2 | N/A |
| € 32,861,546.3 | ||
| Total | PLN 178,198,320.1 | |
| € 42,588,384.9 | ||
PLN Polish złoty, € Euros, N/A not applicable
aAnnual number of cases (n = 172,117) are estimated pediatric cases (< 15 years old) for 2015 based on the reports of the Polish National Institute of Public Health, and of the Department of Prevention and Control of Infectious Diseases, for the number of Polish varicella cases in 2014/2015 [10, 11]. The proportion of pediatric inpatients vs. outpatients was derived from the Polish hospitalization rate due to varicella [11], along with distribution of cases in each age group in Poland, estimated from the 2010 report of the European surveillance system for infectious diseases [33]