| Literature DB >> 30698148 |
Jean-Philippe Lacour1, Abdallah Khemis1, Françoise Giordano-Labadie2, Ludovic Martin3, Delphine Staumont-Salle4, Florence Hacard5, Haijun Tian6, Doreen McBride7, Kelly Hollis8, Shannon Hunter8, Laurent Martin9, Audrey Lamirand9, Sophie Le Guen9, Maria-Magdalena Balp10, Frédéric Berard5.
Abstract
Data on the clinical burden of chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU) and economic consequences are lacking in France. To characterize the clinical and economic burden of CSU in symptomatic patients despite treatment by analysing data of French patients from the ASSURE-CSU study. ASSURE-CSU was an international observational study that included CSU patients with symptoms that lasted for 12 months or more despite treatment. Disease characteristics and healthcare resource use were obtained from medical records. Data on disease history, health-related quality of life (HR-QoL), and work productivity were collected from a patient survey. A total of 101 patients were analysed (76.2% female; mean age: 48.9 years) with moderate to severe disease (UAS7 score ≥16) in 43.4% and angioedema in 72.3%. The mean (S.D.) total scores of Chronic Urticaria Quality of Life (CU-Q2oL) and Dermatology Life Quality Index (DLQI) were 37.7 (22.3) and 9.7 (6.9), respectively, thus indicating a significant impact of the disease on HR-QoL. Mean absenteeism and presenteeism were 6.4% and 20.8%, respectively, with a mean loss of work productivity estimated at 20.7%. The mean (S.D.) total direct cost of CSU was €2,397 per patient per year and was mainly driven by therapies (€1,435) and inpatient costs (€859). The indirect costs for four weeks were mainly presenteeism (€421) and loss of work productivity (€420). CSU significantly impairs HR-QoL, which increases with the severity of the disease. The direct and indirect costs for the management of symptomatic CSU are an important economic burden.Entities:
Keywords: angioedema; chronic idiopathic urticaria; chronic spontaneous urticaria; health economics; health-related quality of life; observational study
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30698148 DOI: 10.1684/ejd.2018.3446
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Dermatol ISSN: 1167-1122 Impact factor: 3.328