| Literature DB >> 31187461 |
Korinna Karampampa1, Hanna Gyllensten2,3, Fei Yang2, Chantelle Murley2, Emilie Friberg2, Jan Hillert2, Kristina Alexanderson2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The aim was to longitudinally explore the healthcare, sickness absence (SA), and disability pension (DP) cost trajectories among newly diagnosed people with multiple sclerosis (MS), and investigate whether trajectories differ by year of MS diagnosis, sociodemographics, and multi-morbidity.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31187461 PMCID: PMC7018869 DOI: 10.1007/s41669-019-0150-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacoecon Open ISSN: 2509-4262
Unit costs used in the calculation of direct and indirect costs
| Year | Value in 2017 SEKa | Value in 2017 Eurosb | Source | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Average inpatient and specialised outpatient cost per 1.0 DRG | 2006 | 51,099 | 5303 | Swedish Association of Local Authorities and Regions, cost per patient for somatic illnesses [ |
| 2007 | 50,348 | 5226 | ||
| 2008 | 51,516 | 5347 | ||
| 2009 | 51,913 | 5388 | ||
| 2010 | 50,582 | 5250 | ||
| 2011 | 50,411 | 5232 | ||
| 2012 | 49,944 | 5184 | ||
| 2013 | 51,596 | 5355 | ||
| Co-payment for hospital stay (cost per day of stay) | 2018 | 100 | 10 | Assume SEK100 per day, for whole Sweden, as this is the case for the majority of the regions in Sweden; information obtained from the Swedish Association of Local Authorities and Regions. The max co-payment amount for inpatient healthcare was set to SEK1500 per year; assumption for whole Sweden, based on information from the region Västra Götalandsregionen [ |
| Co-payment for specialised outpatient healthcare (cost per visit) | 2018 | 273 | 28 | The max co-payment amount for outpatient healthcare was set to SEK1100 per year. Only one region in Sweden has a max co-payment below SEK1100; so SEK1100 was assumed for the entire country. Swedish Association of Local Authorities and Regions [ |
| Monthly salary including employer contributions | 2006 | 42,061 | 4365 | The average monthly salary (2013 values) for all employment types was obtained from Statistics Sweden [ |
| 2007 | 41,485 | 4306 | ||
| 2008 | 42,179 | 4378 | ||
| 2009 | 43,000 | 4463 | ||
| 2010 | 42,010 | 4360 | ||
| 2011 | 41,338 | 4290 | ||
| 2012 | 41,038 | 4259 | ||
| 2013 | 41,284 | 4285 |
DRG diagnosis-related groups, ECU European Currency Unit, SEK Swedish krona
aAll unit costs were inflated to 2017 prices using annual Harmonised Index of Consumer Prices (HICP) for healthcare available from Eurostat [15]
bThe annual exchange rate for 2017 from SEK to Euros that was used was 9.6351. Source: Eurostat, Annual Exchange Rates Euro/ECU [37]
Sociodemographic and multi-morbidity characteristics at year of diagnosis, when pooling all four study cohorts and also by study cohort, which were constructed based on the year people were diagnosed with multiple sclerosis (MS)
| All cohorts | Cohort 2006 | Cohort 2007 | Cohort 2008 | Cohort 2009 | Pearson’s Chi square ( | Log-likelihood test Chi square ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | 0.39 (0.942) | 0.39 (0.942) | |||||
| Women | 2249 (68.73) | 552 (16.87) | 581 (17.76) | 563 (17.21) | 553 (16.9) | ||
| Men | 1023 (31.27) | 241 (7.37) | 270 (8.25) | 258 (7.89) | 254 (7.76) | ||
| Age at diagnosis | 15.48 (0.079) | 15.57 (0.076) | |||||
| 25–34 | 896 (27.38) | 216 (6.6) | 209 (6.39) | 245 (7.49) | 226 (6.91) | ||
| 35–44 | 1060 (32.4) | 247 (7.55) | 274 (8.37) | 257 (7.85) | 282 (8.62) | ||
| 45–54 | 850 (25.98) | 203 (6.2) | 231 (7.06) | 212 (6.48) | 204 (6.23) | ||
| 55–60 | 466 (14.24) | 127 (3.88) | 137 (4.19) | 107 (3.27) | 95 (2.9) | ||
| Educational levelb | 7.74 (0.56) | 7.94 (0.54) | |||||
| Elementary (0–9 years) | 433 (13.60) | 95 (2.98) | 110 (3.45) | 112 (3.52) | 116 (3.64) | ||
| High school (10–12 years) | 1561 (49.03) | 400 (12.56) | 419 (13.16) | 380 (11.93) | 362 (11.37) | ||
| University/college (> 12 years) | 1190 (37.37) | 291 (9.14) | 310 (9.74) | 299 (9.39) | 290 (9.11) | ||
| Country of birthb | 12.73 (0.389) | 13.16 (0.358) | |||||
| Sweden | 2826 (88.76) | 708 (22.24) | 733 (23.02) | 700 (21.98) | 685 (21.51) | ||
| Nordic countries (except Sweden) | 85 (2.67) | 13 (0.41) | 34 (1.07) | 19 (0.6) | 19 (0.6) | ||
| EU27 (except Denmark, Finland, Iceland, and Sweden) | 71 (2.23) | 19 (0.6) | 18 (0.57) | 17 (0.53) | 17 (0.53) | ||
| Rest of the world | 202 (6.34) | 46 (1.44) | 54 (1.7) | 55 (1.73) | 47 (1.48) | ||
| Type of living areab | 13.73 (0.033) | 13.94 (0.03) | |||||
| Big cities | 1200 (37.69) | 311 (9.77) | 277 (8.7) | 310 (9.74) | 302 (9.48) | ||
| Medium-sized cities | 1087 (34.14) | 268 (8.42) | 307 (9.64) | 248 (7.79) | 264 (8.29) | ||
| Small towns/villages | 897 (28.17) | 207 (6.5) | 255 (8.01) | 233 (7.32) | 202 (6.34) | ||
| Family situationb | 34.24 (< 0.0001) | 34.68 (< 0.0001) | |||||
| Married/cohabitating without children at home | 395 (12.41) | 129 (4.05) | 117 (3.67) | 85 (2.67) | 64 (2.01) | ||
| Married/cohabitating with children at home | 1320 (41.46) | 308 (9.67) | 361 (11.34) | 333 (10.46) | 318 (9.99) | ||
| Single without children at home | 1166 (36.62) | 270 (8.48) | 279 (8.76) | 305 (9.58) | 312 (9.8) | ||
| Single with children at home | 303 (9.52) | 79 (2.48) | 82 (2.58) | 68 (2.14) | 74 (2.32) | ||
| Multi-morbidity | 4.77 (0.19) | 4.96 (0.175) | |||||
| Yes | 3027 (92.51) | 730 (22.31) | 786 (24.02) | 751 (22.95) | 760 (23.23) | ||
| No | 245 (7.49) | 63 (1.93) | 65 (1.99) | 70 (2.14) | 47 (1.44) | ||
| Anxiety/depression | 5.64 (0.131) | 5.57 (0.135) | |||||
| Yes | 181 (5.53) | 55 (1.68) | 50 (1.53) | 40 (1.22) | 36 (1.1) | ||
| No | 3091 (94.47) | 738 (22.56) | 801 (24.48) | 781 (23.87) | 771 (23.56) |
aThe percentages are calculated as n divided with the total number of individuals in the study population (3272 if not otherwise indicated; seeb)
bThe total number of individuals with this type of information in the study population (i.e. all individuals excluding those with missing information in this category) was 3184
Mean costs per patient per year [95% confidence intervals] in Euros 2017, by all costs and by costs generated with multiple sclerosis (MS) as the main diagnosis, when pooling all four study cohorts and also by study cohort, and by type of cost [(a) Direct costs, (b) Indirect costs]
| All cohorts | Cohort 2006 | Cohort 2007 | Cohort 2008 | Cohort 2009 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Inpatient costs | |||||
| Year 1 | 2642 [2121–3163] | 2748 [2218–3277] | 2439 [2038–2841] | 3210 [2531–3890] | 2172 [1698–2645] |
| Year 2 | 1574 [1122–2026] | 1693 [1155–2230] | 1617 [1187–2047] | 1463 [1145–1780]* | 1524 [1000–2048] |
| Year 3 | 1606 [1250–1963] | 1710 [1285–2134] | 1672 [1331–2013] | 1721 [1330–2113] | 1322 [1052–1592] |
| Year 4 | 1488 [1076–1900] | 1305 [998–1611] | 1745 [1090–2399] | 1531 [1205–1856] | 1372 [1012–1732] |
| Year 5 | 1515 [1159–1872] | 1672 [1312–2032] | 1345 [1064–1626] | 1544 [1127–1960] | 1500 [1132–1869] |
| Inpatient costs with MS as main diagnosis | |||||
| Year 1 | 664 [510–819] | 823 [658–988] | 600 [464–737] | 803 [574–1032] | 431 [344–519] |
| Year 2 | 492 [302–683] | 366 [224–508] | 567 [345–789] | 571 [352–790] | 465 [288–643] |
| Year 3 | 585 [363–807] | 525 [300–749] | 699 [442–957] | 709 [462–956] | 406 [246–567] |
| Year 4 | 494 [291–696] | 389 [203–575] | 699 [447–951] | 553 [343–764] | 333 [171–495] |
| Year 5 | 458 [263–654] | 522 [292–751] | 519 [315–724] | 468 [259–677] | 323 [184–463] |
| Outpatient costs | |||||
| Year 1 | 1768 [1655–1880] | 1746 [1605–1887] | 1481 [1383–1579] | 1720 [1625–1814] | 2124 [2007–2241] |
| Year 2 | 1235 [1128–1341] | 1004 [886–1121] | 1130 [1049–1210] | 1461 [1341–1582] | 1343 [1235–1451] |
| Year 3 | 1234 [1124–1344] | 1007 [912–1103] | 1223 [1116–1331] | 1216 [1107–1325] | 1488 [1361–1616] |
| Year 4 | 1266 [1157–1375] | 1128 [1016–1240] | 1017 [920–1115] | 1426 [1314–1538] | 1492 [1376–1607] |
| Year 5 | 1318 [1200–1436] | 1059 [941–1177] | 1222 [1120–1324] | 1575 [1451–1699] | 1415 [1286–1544] |
| Outpatient costs with MS as main diagnosis | |||||
| Year 1 | 764 [714–813] | 768 [707–829] | 627 [591–664] | 752 [706–798] | 907 [852–962] |
| Year 2 | 626 [572–680] | 480 [439–522] | 618 [570–666] | 699 [637–760] | 706 [642–770] |
| Year 3 | 599 [538–660] | 467 [420–514] | 587 [530–644] | 577 [515–639] | 764 [686–843] |
| Year 4 | 616 [553–679] | 474 [428–519] | 516 [456–576] | 691 [624–757] | 784 [705–864] |
| Year 5 | 661 [585–736] | 472 [400–544] | 628 [559–697] | 824 [739–909] | 718 [642–793] |
| Co-payments | |||||
| Year 1 | 113 [109–117] | 115 [111–119] | 110 [106–114] | 116 [112–120] | 112 [108–115] |
| Year 2 | 77 [73–81] | 78 [74–82] | 76 [72–80] | 78 [74–82] | 77 [73–81] |
| Year 3 | 70 [66–74] | 69 [65–73] | 65 [62–69] | 70 [66–74] | 75 [72–79] |
| Year 4 | 68 [64–71] | 63 [59–66] | 62 [58–65] | 72 [68–76] | 73 [69–76] |
| Year 5 | 69 [65–73] | 63 [59–68] | 68 [64–72] | 73 [69–77] | 70 [66–74] |
| All drug costs | |||||
| Year 1 | 4058 [3707–4409] | 3652 [3302–4003] | 3637 [3304–3971] | 4221 [3865–4577] | 4721 [4356–5086] |
| Year 2 | 6770 [6291–7250] | 6353 [5872–6835] | 6613 [6139–7088] | 6863 [6365–7362] | 7250 [6787–7713] |
| Year 3 | 6117 [5646–6589] | 6066 [5543–6588] | 6263 [5800–6726] | 5758 [5313–6203] | 6382 [5926–6838] |
| Year 4 | 5655 [5193–6118] | 5485 [4989–5981] | 5933 [5483–6384] | 5272 [4834–5710] | 5929 [5464–6395] |
| Year 5 | 5298 [4836–5761] | 5158 [4668–5649] | 5292 [4863–5722] | 5181 [4718–5645] | 5561 [5094–6028] |
| MS drug costs | |||||
| Year 1 | 3614 [3270–3957] | 3198 [2854–3541] | 3203 [2876–3530] | 3729 [3386–4072] | 4325 [3964–4686] |
| Year 2 | 6220 [5753–6687] | 5812 [5337–6286] | 6063 [5591–6535] | 6266 [5801–6731] | 6739 [6281–7196] |
| Year 3 | 5528 [5071–5984] | 5378 [4901–5855] | 5669 [5211–6126] | 5230 [4785–5674] | 5833 [5385–6281] |
| Year 4 | 5042 [4596–5487] | 4757 [4307–5207] | 5307 [4866–5749] | 4673 [4244–5101] | 5429 [4968–5891] |
| Year 5 | 4647 [4207–5087] | 4381 [3949–4812] | 4648 [4225–5072] | 4492 [4047–4938] | 5066 [4606–5527] |
| Total direct costs | |||||
| Year 1 | 8581 [7926–9237] | 8261 [7565–8956] | 7668 [7141–8195] | 9267 [8475–10,060] | 9128 [8521–9736] |
| Year 2 | 9655 [8996–10,316] | 9128 [8396–9860] | 9435 [8826–10,045] | 9864 [9289–10,440] | 10,194 [9472–10,917] |
| Year 3 | 9027 [8434–9621] | 8852 [8172–9532] | 9224 [8656–9792] | 8765 [8179–9351] | 9268 [8728–9808] |
| Year 4 | 8476 [7843–9109] | 7980 [7382–8578] | 8757 [7972–9543] | 8301 [7736–8865] | 8865 [8280–9451] |
| Year 5 | 8200 [7599–8801] | 7953 [7341–8565] | 7927 [7405–8449] | 8373 [7728–9018] | 8546 [7920–9171] |
| Total direct costs with MS as main diagnosis | |||||
| Year 1 | 5155 [4760–5550] | 4903 [4492–5314] | 4541 [4179–4903] | 5401 [4980–5822] | 5775 [5389–6161] |
| Year 2 | 7415 [6914–7917] | 6736 [6233–7239] | 7323 [6807–7839] | 7614 [7111–8118] | 7987 [7503–8471] |
| Year 3 | 6781 [6282–7281] | 6439 [5915–6962] | 7021 [6511–7531] | 6586 [6100–7072] | 7079 [6600–7557] |
| Year 4 | 6219 [5733–6704] | 5682 [5191–6173] | 6584 [6097–7071] | 5989 [5515–6463] | 6619 [6130–7109] |
| Year 5 | 5834 [5348–6320] | 5438 [4957–5919] | 5864 [5396–6331] | 5857 [5350–6365] | 6177 [5689–6665] |
| SA costsa | |||||
| Year 1 | 8458 [7407–9510] | 9795 [8743–10,847] | 8684 [7741–9627] | 8532 [7541–9523] | 7485 [6562–8408] |
| Year 2 | 6065 [5179–6950] | 9610 [8483–10,736] | 8588 [7566–9611] | 8175 [7118–9232] | 7460 [6459–8462] |
| Year 3 | 4546 [3789–5303] | 7811 [6758–8864] | 5591 [4782–6400] | 5010 [4216–5804] | 5846 [4960–6731] |
| Year 4 | 3881 [3181–4580] | 5604 [4704–6505] | 3201 [2612–3790] | 4531 [3770–5292] | 4847 [4071–5623] |
| Year 5 | 2778 [2206–3349] | 3561 [2880–4241] | 4240 [3497–4984] | 4944 [4142–5746] | |
| SA costs with MS as main diagnosisa | |||||
| Year 1 | 2508 [1980–3037] | 2591 [2034–3148] | 2638 [2125–3152] | 2458 [1918–2997] | 2345 [1841–2850] |
| Year 2 | 3689 [2964–4415] | 3957 [3190–4724] | 3757 [3037–4477] | 3301 [2617–3986] | 3742 [3011–4474] |
| Year 3 | 3227 [2560–3893] | 3912 [3127–4697] | 2912 [2326–3498] | 2755 [2153–3358] | 3327 [2635–4020] |
| Year 4 | 2830 [2216–3443] | 3071 [2377–3765] | 2327 [1813–2841] | 2746 [2141–3351] | 3174 [2533–3815] |
| Year 5 | 2606 [2013–3199] | 1817 [1327–2306] | 2538 [1946–3131] | 2755 [2154–3356] | 3312 [2623–4001] |
| DP costs | |||||
| Year 1 | 6972 [5836–8108] | 7277 [6107–8447] | 8055 [6888–9222] | 6583 [5466–7699] | 5974 [4884–7065] |
| Year 2 | 8691 [7465–9917] | 9375 [8093–10,658] | 10,232 [8965–11,500] | 8259 [7038–9479] | 6897 [5762–8032] |
| Year 3 | 10,941 [9609–12,274] | 12,028 [10,618–13,437] | 13,297 [11,876–14,718] | 10,548 [9235–11,862] | 7891 [6705–9077] |
| Year 4 | 12,534 [11,150–13,918] | 14,412 [12,919–15,904] | 14,923 [13,484–16,362] | 11,519 [10,175–12,863] | 9281 [8020–10,541] |
| Year 5 | 13,462 [12,054–14,870] | 15,989 [14,473–17,506] | 14,987 [13,563–16,412] | 12,460 [11,075–13,845] | 10,410 [9106–11,715] |
| DP costs with MS as main diagnosis | |||||
| Year 1 | 1731 [1175–2287] | 1738 [1152–2325] | 2569 [1877–3262] | 1936 [1339–2534] | 680 [331–1028] |
| Year 2 | 3321 [2559–4082] | 3443 [2646–4239] | 4454 [3585–5324] | 3490 [2697–4283] | 1895 [1309–2481] |
| Year 3 | 5355 [4387–6323] | 5545 [4536–6553] | 6866 [5786–7946] | 5737 [4737–6737] | 3272 [2489–4056] |
| Year 4 | 6947 [5866–8028] | 7458 [6319–8598] | 8654 [7478–9829] | 6872 [5799–7945] | 4802 [3866–5739] |
| Year 5 | 7951 [6806–9097] | 8954 [7723–10,186] | 9179 [7987–10,371] | 7841 [6691–8992] | 5831 [4824–6838] |
| Total indirect costs | |||||
| Year 1 | 15,596 [14,248–16,945] | 17,072 [15,667–18,477] | 16,739 [15,399–18,080] | 15,114 [13,773–16,456] | 13,459 [12,154–14,765] |
| Year 2 | 17,149 [15,676–18,622] | 18,985 [17,462–20,508] | 18,820 [17,330–20,310] | 16,434 [14,962–17,905] | 14,358 [12,950–15,765] |
| Year 3 | 17,006 [15,536–18,475] | 19,838 [18,276–21,401] | 18,888 [17,378–20,397] | 15,559 [14,127–16,990] | 13,737 [12,361–15,113] |
| Year 4 | 17,080 [15,611–18,548] | 20,016 [18,419–21,614] | 18,124 [16,660–19,587] | 16,050 [14,609–17,491] | 14,128 [12,755–15,501] |
| Year 5 | 17,343 [15,875–18,810] | 18,767 [17,243–20,290] | 18,548 [17,079–20,017] | 16,700 [15,251–18,150] | 15,355 [13,927–16,783] |
| Total indirect costs with MS as main diagnosis | |||||
| Year 1 | 4239 [3480–4998] | 4329 [3536–5123] | 5208 [4369–6047] | 4394 [3601–5186] | 3025 [2415–3635] |
| Year 2 | 7010 [5985–8035] | 7400 [6323–8477] | 8211 [7128–9294] | 6791 [5776–7806] | 5637 [4712–6562] |
| Year 3 | 8582 [7437–9727] | 9457 [8220–10,693] | 9778 [8590–10,966] | 8493 [7352–9634] | 6600 [5586–7613] |
| Year 4 | 9777 [8566–10,987] | 10,530 [9230–11,829] | 10,981 [9736–12,226] | 9619 [8419–10,818] | 7976 [6877–9076] |
| Year 5 | 10,557 [9303–11,811] | 10,771 [9486–12,056] | 11,717 [10,427–13,008] | 10,596 [9347–11,846] | 9142 [7953–10,332] |
DP disability pension, SA sickness absence
aIn order not to introduce bias in relation to employment status, only SA spells > 14 days were included in the SA costs calculation
Fig. 1Estimated direct and indirect cost trajectories, overall for all cohorts (pooled data from all four cohorts; a direct costs, b indirect costs) during the 5-year follow-up. Dotted lines present the 95% confidence intervals. Note 1: The values 0–1 on the y-axis denote the 1st quintile (0–20% of observations), 1–2 the 2nd (20–40% of observations), 2–3 the 3rd (40–60% of observations), 3–4 the 4th (60–80% of observations), and 4–5 the 5th (80–100% of observations). Each included individual with MS is classified for each year of follow-up into the respective quintile for direct and indirect costs, i.e. individuals can be classified in different quintiles for each year of follow-up. For example, an individual diagnosed with MS in 2006 may be in the 2nd quintile (between 20% and 40% of observations) in 2006 when it comes to direct costs, but in the 3rd quintile regarding indirect costs. Note 2: Trajectories represent clusters (sub-groups) of people with MS that have a similar likelihood for belonging to the identified quintiles of costs, over time (up to 5 years after diagnosis). MS multiple sclerosis
Fig. 2Estimated direct and indirect cost trajectories for the 2006 (a direct costs, b indirect costs) and 2009 (c direct costs, d indirect costs) study cohorts, separately, during the 5-year follow-up. Dotted lines present the 95% confidence intervals. Note 1: The values 0–1 on the y-axis denote the 1st quintile (0–20% of observations), 1–2 the 2nd (20–40% of observations), 2–3 the 3rd (40–60% of observations), 3–4 the 4th (60–80% of observations), and 4–5 the 5th (80–100% of observations). Each included individual with MS is classified for each year of follow-up into the respective quintile for direct and indirect costs, i.e. individuals can be classified in different quintiles for each year of follow-up. For example, an individual diagnosed with MS in 2006 may be in the 2nd quintile (between 20% and 40% of observations) in 2006 when it comes to direct costs, but in the 3rd quintile regarding indirect costs. Note 2: Trajectories represent clusters (sub-groups) of people with MS that have a similar likelihood for belonging to the identified quintiles of costs, over time (up to 5 years after diagnosis). MS multiple sclerosis
Sociodemographic and multi-morbidity differences across the estimated four trajectories of newly diagnosed individuals with multiple sclerosis (MS)
| Trajectory 1: low direct and indirect costs | Trajectory 2: high direct but low indirect costs | Trajectory 3: low direct but high indirect costs | Trajectory 4: high direct and indirect costs | Pearson’s Chi square ( | Log-likelihood test Chi square ( | Diff. in R2c | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 19.9% | 31.8% | 16.1% | 32.1% | ||||
| Sex | 37.81 (< 0.0001) | 37.98 (< 0.0001) | 0.024 | ||||
| Women | 410 (12.55) | 678 (20.76) | 362 (11.08) | 797 (24.4) | |||
| Men | 252 (7.72) | 351 (10.75) | 148 (4.53) | 268 (8.21) | |||
| Age at diagnosis | 368.49 (< 0.0001) | 373.23 (< 0.0001) | 0.050 | ||||
| 25–34 | 179 (5.47) | 424 (12.96) | 56 (1.71) | 237 (7.24) | |||
| 35–44 | 202 (6.17) | 375 (11.46) | 108 (3.3) | 375 (11.46) | |||
| 45–54 | 181 (5.53) | 173 (5.29) | 193 (5.9) | 303 (9.26) | |||
| 55–60 | 101 (3.09) | 57 (1.74) | 153 (4.68) | 155 (4.74) | |||
| Educational levelb | 157.85 (< 0.0001) | 159.62 (< 0.0001) | 0.018 | ||||
| Elementary (0–9 years) | 78 (2.45) | 86 (2.7) | 113 (3.55) | 156 (4.9) | |||
| High school (10–12 years) | 267 (8.39) | 440 (13.82) | 272 (8.54) | 582 (18.28) | |||
| University/college (> 12 years) | 295 (9.27) | 454 (14.26) | 119 (3.74) | 322 (10.11) | |||
| Country of birthb | 11.07 (0.5229) | 11.47 (0.4888) | –0.001 | ||||
| Sweden | 559 (17.56) | 868 (27.26) | 459 (14.42) | 940 (29.52) | |||
| Nordic countries (except Sweden) | 17 (0.53) | 26 (0.82) | 14 (0.44) | 28 (0.88) | |||
| EU27 (except Denmark, Finland, Iceland, and Sweden) | 19 (0.6) | 23 (0.72) | < 10 (0.25) | 21 (0.66) | |||
| Rest of the world | 45 (1.41) | 63 (1.98) | 23 (0.72) | 71 (2.23) | |||
| Type of living areab | 39.48 (< 0.0001) | 40.05 (< 0.0001) | 0.007 | ||||
| Big cities | 266 (8.35) | 419 (13.16) | 144 (4.52) | 371 (11.65) | |||
| Medium-sized cities | 211 (6.63) | 322 (10.11) | 191 (6) | 363 (11.4) | |||
| Small towns/villages | 163 (5.12) | 239 (7.51) | 169 (5.31) | 326 (10.24) | |||
| Family situationb | 109.10 (< 0.0001) | 112.09 (< 0.0001) | 0.005 | ||||
| Married/cohabitating without children at home | 83 (2.61) | 69 (2.17) | 104 (3.27) | 139 (4.37) | |||
| Married/cohabitating with children at home | 260 (8.17) | 465 (14.6) | 159 (4.99) | 436 (13.69) | |||
| Single without children at home | 236 (7.41) | 395 (12.41) | 176 (5.53) | 359 (11.28) | |||
| Single with children at home | 61 (1.92) | 51 (1.6) | 65 (2.04) | 126 (3.96) | |||
| Multi-morbidity | 191.00 (< 0.0001) | 190.52 (< 0.0001) | 0.029 | ||||
| Yes | 1284 (39.24) | 187 (5.72) | 181 (5.53) | 1375 (42.02) | |||
| No | 136 (4.16) | 58 (1.77) | 31 (0.95) | 20 (0.61) | |||
| Anxiety/depression | 5.64 (0.131) | 5.57 (0.135) | 0.007 | ||||
| Yes | 55 (1.68) | 50 (1.53) | 40 (1.22) | 36 (1.1) | |||
| No | 738 (22.56) | 801 (24.48) | 781 (23.87) | 771 (23.56) |
aThe percentages are calculated as n divided with the total number of individuals in the study population (3272 if not otherwise indicated; seeb)
bThe total number of individuals with this type of information in the study population (i.e. all individuals excluding those with missing information in this category) was 3184
cThe R2 for the full model was 0.178
| 32.1% of newly diagnosed people with multiple sclerosis (MS) in Sweden had high healthcare, sickness absence, and disability pension costs in the 5 years after diagnosis. |
| Sociodemographic factors and multi-morbidity explained part of the heterogeneity of the cost trajectories in people with MS. Disease severity and other clinical characteristics should also be explored to further understand these cost trajectories. |
| The year of diagnosis was significantly associated with the cost trajectories; it is, however, linked to the availability of innovative MS treatments after diagnosis, which could be associated and explain the cost progression in MS. |