| Literature DB >> 32103158 |
Andrew L Beam1,2,3, Inbar Fried4,5, Nathan Palmer4, Denis Agniel4, Gabriel Brat6, Kathe Fox6, Isaac Kohane4, Anna Sinaiko7, John A F Zupancic8, Joanne Armstrong9.
Abstract
The growth in healthcare spending is an important topic in the United States, and preterm and low-birthweight infants have some of the highest healthcare expenditures of any patient population. We performed a retrospective cohort study of spending in this population using a large, national claims database of commercially insured individuals. A total of 763,566 infants with insurance coverage through Aetna, Inc. for the first 6 months of post-natal life were included, and received approximately $8.4 billion (2016 USD) in healthcare services. Infants with billing codes indicating preterm status (<37 weeks, n = 50,511) incurred medical expenditures of $76,153 on average, while low-birthweight status (<2500 g) was associated with average spending of $114,437. Infants born at 24 weeks gestation (n = 418) had the highest per infant average expenditures of $603,778. Understanding the drivers of variation in costs within gestational age and birthweight bands is an important target for future studies.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32103158 PMCID: PMC7314662 DOI: 10.1038/s41372-020-0635-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Perinatol ISSN: 0743-8346 Impact factor: 2.521
Overview of the infants in each gestational age and birthweight cohort.
| Expenditures | Adverse event prevalence | Length of stay | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Median | Mean (SD) | Total | Mortality | BPD | RDS | ROP | NEC | SEP | Mean (SD) | Median | |||
| Weeks of gestation | |||||||||||||
| <24 | 536 | $7,318 | $242,887 ($458,312) | $130,187,254 | 60.40% | 26.50% | 38.80% | 21.10% | 8.80% | 24.60% | 524 | 29 (50) | 2 |
| 24 | 418 | $548,865 | $603,778 ($509,165) | $252,379,413 | 24.40% | 65.30% | 89% | 59.60% | 12.70% | 49% | 403 | 80 (59) | 92 |
| 25–26 | 984 | $418,191 | $493,304 ($396,830) | $485,410,893 | 10.70% | 60.40% | 91.10% | 65.90% | 11% | 46.20% | 947 | 77 (45) | 81 |
| 27–28 | 1357 | $291,029 | $356,839 ($334,460) | $484,230,274 | 3.40% | 38.80% | 89.30% | 60.50% | 7.70% | 31.30% | 1306 | 63 (31) | 64 |
| 29–30 | 2182 | $173,638 | $213,353 ($191,232) | $465,536,989 | 1.70% | 14.80% | 79.40% | 47.80% | 4.30% | 25.20% | 2106 | 46 (24) | 44 |
| 31–32 | 4562 | $100,032 | $124,553 ($118,343) | $568,209,519 | 1% | 3.90% | 57.80% | 19.30% | 1.90% | 18.50% | 4397 | 29 (14) | 28 |
| 33–34 | 11,999 | $45,580 | $62,994 ($91,189) | $755,860,528 | 0.60% | 0.80% | 30.60% | 1.80% | 0.80% | 14.40% | 11486 | 15 (11) | 14 |
| 35–36 | 28,474 | $9,864 | $24,754 ($72,519) | $704,847,939 | 0.30% | 0.20% | 10.50% | 0.20% | 0.10% | 5.50% | 26648 | 6 (8) | 3 |
| All preterm with specified GA | 50,512 | $26,374 | $76,153 ($169,931) | $3,846,662,810 | 3% | 4.40% | 27.90% | 8% | 1.30% | 12.40% | 560077 | 4 (8) | 2 |
| Full term | 713,253 | $3,787 | $6,370 ($29,170) | $4,543,558,496 | 0.10% | 0% | 0.10% | 0% | 0% | 0% | 512260 | 2 (4) | 2 |
| Birthweight | |||||||||||||
| <500 g | 393 | $6,379 | $247,994 ($450,490) | $97,461,782 | 59.30% | 24.20% | 37.70% | 22.60% | 5.10% | 21.90% | 381 | 32 (54) | 2 |
| 500–749 g | 1002 | $467,490 | $537,624 ($460,159) | $538,699,110 | 22.80% | 59.80% | 85.90% | 58.20% | 13.10% | 43.40% | 970 | 76 (57) | 84 |
| 750–999 g | 1462 | $356,300 | $428,791 ($343,145) | $626,892,003 | 7% | 49.20% | 89.30% | 65.20% | 9.40% | 37.30% | 1424 | 73 (39) | 73 |
| 1000–1249 g | 1840 | $214,741 | $272,743 ($232,247) | $501,846,932 | 2.80% | 24.80% | 79.80% | 55.60% | 5.40% | 25.90% | 1772 | 53 (26) | 52 |
| 1250–1499 g | 2433 | $135,675 | $180,346 ($180,388) | $438,780,665 | 1.80% | 9.60% | 63.50% | 42.20% | 3.10% | 21.60% | 2322 | 39 (23) | 36 |
| 1500–1749g | 3485 | $88,189 | $114,886 ($119,166) | $400,376,349 | 1% | 3.60% | 47.90% | 14.50% | 2% | 17.40% | 3354 | 27 (16) | 25 |
| 1750–1999g | 5410 | $54,232 | $75,293 ($100,897) | $407,337,737 | 0.60% | 1.80% | 33.10% | 3.80% | 1% | 13.10% | 5153 | 18 (12) | 16 |
| 2000–2499g | 16,483 | $25,533 | $42,998 ($90,127) | $708,735,398 | 0.40% | 0.50% | 20.90% | 0.60% | 0.50% | 9.90% | 15577 | 10 (10) | 8 |
| All low birthweight with specified BW | 32,508 | $48,906 | $114,437 ($204,565) | $3,720,129,976 | 4.80% | 7.60% | 45.70% | 13.90% | 2.20% | 20.20% | 30953 | 23 (28) | 14 |
| Normal birthweight | 727,538 | $3,826 | $6,743 ($30,360) | $4,905,759,132 | 0.10% | 0% | 0.40% | 0% | 0% | 0.20% | 525736 | 3 (4) | 2 |
Fig. 16-month spending distributions, stratified by gestational age.
The y-axis displays the gestational age group estimated from ICD-9/10 codes at birth and the x-axis displays the total 6-month expenditures in dollars.
Fig. 26-month spending distributions, stratified by birthweight.
The y-axis displays the birthweight group estimated from ICD-9/10 codes at birth and the x-axis displays the total 6-month expenditures in dollars.
The effect of adverse events on expenditures.
| Variable | Spending multiplier | 95% confidence interval |
|---|---|---|
| Bronchopulmonary dysplasia | 2.15 | (1.94, 2.38) |
| Necrotizing enterocolitis | 1.91 | (1.65, 2.22) |
| Respiratory distress syndrome | 1.66 | (1.58, 1.75) |
| Retinopathy of prematurity | 1.16 | (1.07, 1.25) |
| Neonatal sepsis | 1.29 | (1.22, 1.37) |
| Sex = Male | 1.08 | (1.03, 1.13) |
| <500 g | 1.43 | (1.11, 1.85) |
| 500–749 g | 2.81 | (2.27, 3.48) |
| 750–999 g | 2.25 | (1.90, 2.67) |
| 1000–1249 g | 2.04 | (1.78, 2.34) |
| 1250–1499 g | 1.90 | (1.72, 2.11) |
| 1500–1749g | 1.66 | (1.54, 1.80) |
| 1750–1999g | 1.34 | (1.26, 1.43) |
| <24 | 1.09 | (0.84, 1.41) |
| 24 | 2.46 | (1.90, 2.67) |
| 25–26 | 2.44 | (2.00, 2.96) |
| 27–28 | 2.61 | (2.23, 3.06) |
| 29–30 | 2.27 | (2.02, 2.56) |
| 31–32 | 2.16 | (2.00, 2.33) |
| 33–34 | 1.71 | (1.62, 1.81) |
Multivariable analysis of the impact of adverse event occurrence on 6-month expenditures for infants with a documented birthweight and gestational age (n = 27,591) in the claims cohort. All spending multipliers had p values <0.001, with the exception of gestational age <24 weeks (p = 0.53) and birthweight <500 g (p = 0.012). The spending multipliers in this table represent the full model which contained all risk factors, gestational age, birthweight, and gender as variables.