| Literature DB >> 32646476 |
T Joseph Mattingly1, Kalpana Shere-Wolfe2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The financial implications of Lyme disease (LD) can vary widely for both the health system and the individual patients experiencing the disease. The aim of this review was to summarize published data on clinical and economic outcomes associated with LD.Entities:
Keywords: Cost; Lyme disease; Outcomes; Value
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32646476 PMCID: PMC7346351 DOI: 10.1186/s13071-020-04214-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Summary of characteristics for included studies
| Reference | Title | Study type | Country | Funding | Patient engagement |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ali et al. (2014) [ | Experiences of patients identifying with chronic Lyme disease in the healthcare system: a qualitative study | Qualitative, in-depth interviews | USA | Government | Yes |
| Berende et al. (2018) [ | Cost-effectiveness of longer-term | Economic analysis (alongside clinical trial) | Netherlands | Government | No |
| Boudreau et al. (2018) [ | Motivations and experiences of Canadians seeking treatment for Lyme disease outside of the conventional Canadian health-care system | Survey; semi-structured; qualitative | Canada | None | Yes |
| Drew & Hewitt (2006) [ | A qualitative approach to understanding patients’ diagnosis of Lyme disease | Qualitative, in-depth interviews | USA | Private non-profit | Yes |
| Eckman et al. (1997) [ | Cost effectiveness of oral as compared with intravenous antibiotic therapy for patients with early Lyme disease or Lyme arthritis | Economic analysis (model) | USA | Government | No |
| Fix et al. (1998) [ | Tick bites and Lyme disease in an endemic setting | Observational (prospective cohort) | USA | Government | No |
| Gasmi et al. (2017) [ | Practices of Lyme disease diagnosis and treatment by general practitioners in Quebec, 2008–2015 | Observational (retrospective cohort) | Canada | Government | No |
| Henningsson et al. (2010) [ | Neuroborreliosis - an epidemiological, clinical and healthcare cost study from an endemic area in the south-east of Sweden | Observational (retrospective cohort) | Sweden | Private non-profit | No |
| Hsia et al. (2002) [ | Cost-effectiveness analysis of the Lyme disease vaccine | Economic analysis (model) | USA | Private non-profit | No |
| Johnson et al. (2011) [ | Healthcare access and burden of care for patients with Lyme disease: a large United States survey | Survey; quantitative | USA | None | Yes |
| Johnson et al. (2014) [ | Severity of chronic Lyme disease compared to other chronic conditions: a quality of life survey | Survey; quantitative | USA | None | Yes |
| Joss et al. (2003) [ | Lyme disease - what is the cost for Scotland? | Observational (prospective cohort) | Scotland | Government | No |
| Lantos et al. (2013) [ | Empiric antibiotic treatment of erythema migrans-like skin lesions as a function of geography: a clinical and cost effectiveness modeling study | Economic analysis (model) | USA | None | No |
| Lightfoot Jr et al. (1993) [ | Empiric parenteral antibiotic treatment of patients with fibromyalgia and fatigue and a positive serologic result for Lyme disease: a cost-effectiveness analysis | Economic analysis (model) | USA | None | No |
| Lohr et al. (2015) [ | Epidemiology and cost of hospital care for Lyme borreliosis in Germany: lessons from a health care utilization database analysis | Observational (cost-of-illness) | Germany | Government | No |
| Maes et al. (1998) [ | A cost-of-illness study of Lyme disease in the United States | Economic analysis (cost-of-illness) | USA | Private for-profit | No |
| Magid et al. (1992) [ | Prevention of Lyme disease after tick bites - a cost-effectiveness analysis | Economic analysis (model) | USA | Government | No |
| Meltzer et al. (1999) [ | The cost effectiveness of vaccinating against Lyme disease | Economic analysis (model) | USA | Government | No |
| Nichol et al. (1998) [ | Test-treatment strategies for patients suspected of having Lyme disease: a cost-effectiveness analysis | Economic analysis (model) | USA | None | No |
| Shadick et al. (2001) [ | The cost-effectiveness of vaccination against Lyme disease | Economic analysis (model) | USA | Government | No |
| van den Wijngaard et al. (2017) [ | The cost of Lyme borreliosis | Observational (cost of illness) | Netherlands | Government | Yes |
| Zhang et al. (2006) [ | Economic impact of Lyme disease | Observational (case-control) | USA | Government | Yes |
Fig. 1Review flow diagram according to the preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses: the PRISMA statement [14]
Most frequent outcomes identified in the context of Lyme disease
| Outcomes | No. of studies | Brief description |
|---|---|---|
| Rheumatologic | 7 [ | Including Lyme arthritis, myalgia, or other musculoskeletal manifestations |
| Neurological | 7 [ | Including encephalopathy, peripheral neuropathy, neuroborrelisosis, bell palsy and meningitis |
| Cardiological | 6 [ | Including Lyme carditis or other defined cardiac sequelae |
| Dermatological | 5 [ | Including erythema migrans, acrodermatitis and chronica atrophicans |
| System challenges | 5 [ | Frustration with diagnostic delay, access issues, multiple providers, out-of-network providers and other negative system experiences |
| Adverse events | 4 [ | Including major and minor events related to antibiotic treatment or vaccination strategies |
| Quality of life | 4 [ | Including quality-adjusted life-year measures or other specific health related quality of life estimates |
| Other Lyme sequelae | 3 [ | Including lymphocytoma, ocular manifestations, headache, acute back pain and neck pain |
| Psychological | 2 [ | Including stress, anxiety, or depression |
Most frequent costs identified in the context of Lyme disease
| Costs | No. of studies | Brief description | Cost category |
|---|---|---|---|
| Intervention | 18 [ | Antibiotic treatments or vaccine interventions studied | Formal health sector |
| Health resource utilization | 17 [ | Office visits, hospitalizations, management of adverse events and other direct medical costs pursuant to common Lyme sequelae | Formal health sector |
| Productivity losses | 10 [ | Any absenteeism or presenteeism costs due to disease | Non-health sector |
| Serological testing | 9 [ | Diagnostic testing | Formal health sector |
| Health system issues | 5 [ | Costs experienced with health system navigation including diagnostic delays, unconventional therapies, costs of inconvenience and costs related to concern for false positive tests | Other |
| Travel expenses | 4 [ | Any travel expenses related to Lyme sequelae | Informal health sector |
| Informal care costs | 2 [ | Caregiver time costs | Informal health sector |