| Literature DB >> 33149932 |
Greta Bütepage1, Ahmed Esawi1, Kristina Alexanderson1, Emilie Friberg1, Chantelle Murley1, Jan Hillert2, Korinna Karampampa1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Comorbidities are common among people with multiple sclerosis (PwMS); yet, their impact on the cost-of-illness (COI) in MS is unknown.Entities:
Keywords: Multiple sclerosis; comorbidity; cost-of-illness; healthcare costs; productivity losses; sick leave; trajectories
Year: 2020 PMID: 33149932 PMCID: PMC7585903 DOI: 10.1177/2055217320968597
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mult Scler J Exp Transl Clin ISSN: 2055-2173
Unit costs used in the calculation of healthcare costs and productivity losses.
| Year | Value in SEK (2018) | Value in Euro (2018) | Source | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Average inpatient and specialised outpatient healthcare cost per DRG | 2006 | 44,355 | 5,014 | Swedish Association for Local Authorities and Regions-Cost per patient for somatic morbidity[ | |
| 2007 | 44,838 | 5,007 | |||
| 2008 | 45,771 | 4,984 | |||
| 2009 | 46,329 | 4,967 | |||
| 2010 | 46,521 | 4,910 | |||
| 2011 | 46,797 | 4,882 | |||
| 2012 | 47,663 | 4,932 | |||
| 2013 | 50,260 | 5,180 | |||
| Co-payment for hospital stay (cost per day of stay) | 2018 | 100 | 10 | This was calculated at 100 SEK per day as this is the case for the majority of regions in Sweden. The max co-payment amount for inpatient healthcare was set to 1,500 SEK. Assumed for all Sweden based on information from the region Västra Götalandsregionen. | |
| Co-payment for specialised outpatient healthcare (cost per visit) | 2018 | 273 | 27 | The max co-payment amount for specialised outpatient care was set to 1,100 SEK as only one region in Sweden had a ceiling value below 1,100 SEK.33 | |
| Monthly salary including employer contribution | Men | 2006 | 41,817 | 4,076 | The average monthly salary for men and women available from Statistics Sweden35 and multiplied by employer contribution rates obtained from the Swedish Tax Authority Sweden.[ |
| 2007 | 42,421 | 4,135 | |||
| 2008 | 42,981 | 4,190 | |||
| 2009 | 43,907 | 4,280 | |||
| 2010 | 43,907 | 4,280 | |||
| 2011 | 43,768 | 4,267 | |||
| 2012 | 44,602 | 4,348 | |||
| 2013 | 45,713 | 4,456 | |||
| Women | 2006 | 35,244 | 3,436 | ||
| 2007 | 35,561 | 3,467 | |||
| 2008 | 36,121 | 3,521 | |||
| 2009 | 37,377 | 3,644 | |||
| 2010 | 37,654 | 3,671 | |||
| 2011 | 37,515 | 3,657 | |||
| 2012 | 38,349 | 3,738 | |||
| 2013 | 39,461 | 3,847 | |||
Baseline socio-demographic characteristics by comorbidity groupa for people with MS, diagnosed in 2006 when aged 25–60 years.
| Any comorbidity | No comorbidity | Ocular comorbidities (H00-H59) | Cardiovascular, genitourinary or cancer disease (I00–I99, N00–N99, C00–D49) | Musculoskeletal comorbidities (M00–M99) | Mental comorbidities (F30–48, F50–59) | Neurological comorbidities (G00–G99) | Injuries (S00–T88) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N = 499 | N = 140 | N = 169 | N = 125 | N = 74 | N = 41 | N = 238 | N = 52 | |
| n (%) | n (%) | n (%) | n (%) | n (%) | n (%) | n (%) | n (%) | |
|
| ||||||||
| Men | 89 (17.84) | 57 (40.71) | 50 (29.59) | 31 (24.80) | 16 (21.62) | 19 (46.34) | 81 (34.03) | 11 (21.15) |
| Women | 410 (82.16) | 83 (59.29) | 119 (70.41) | 94 (75.20) | 58 (78.38) | 22 (53.66) | 157 (65.97) | 41 (78.85) |
|
| ||||||||
| 25–34 | 138 (27.66) | 30 (21.43) | 58 (34.32) | 30 (24.00) | 16 (21.62) | 10 (24.39) | 65 (27.31) | 13 (25.00) |
| 35–44 | 179 (35.87) | 43 (30.71) | 61 (36.09) | 34 (27.20) | 20 (27.03) | <10 | 69 (28.99) | 14 (26.92) |
| 45–54 | 120 (24.05) | 37 (26.43) | 33 (19.53) | 40 (32.00) | 16 (21.62) | 14 (34.15) | 73 (30.67) | 17 (32.69) |
| 55–60 | 62 (12.42) | 30 (21.43) | 17 (10.06) | 21 (16.80) | 22 (29.73) | <10 | 31 (13.03) | <10 |
|
| ||||||||
| Elementary school (≤9) | 57 (11.54) | 17 (12.32) | 18 (10.78) | 16 (13.11) | 10 (13.51) | <10 | 26 (11.06) | 11 (21.15) |
| High school (10–12) | 245 (49.60) | 69 (50.00) | 83 (49.7) | 71 (58.20) | 40 (54.05) | 21 (53.85) | 122 (51.91) | 26 (50.00) |
| University/College (>12) | 192 (38.87) | 52 (37.68) | 66 (39.52) | 35 (28.69) | 24 (32.43) | 11 (28.21) | 87 (37.02) | 15 (28.85) |
|
| ||||||||
| Sweden | 457 (92.51) | 123 (89.13) | 150 (89.82) | 109 (89.34) | 68 (91.89) | 36 (92.31) | 213 (90.64) | 47 (90.38) |
| Nordic countries (except Sweden) | <10 | () | <10 | <10 | <10 | <10 | <10 | <10 |
| EU27 (except Denmark, Finland, and Sweden) | 10 (2.02) | <10 | <10 | <10 | <10 | () | <10 | () |
| Rest of the world | 22 (4.45) | 11 (7.97) | 11 (6.59) | <10 | <10 | <10 | 14 (5.96) | <10 |
|
| ||||||||
| Big cities | 189 (38.26) | 54 (39.13) | 70 (41.92) | 51 (41.80) | 30 (40.54) | 13 (33.33) | 105 (44.68) | 20 (38.46) |
| Medium sized cities | 169 (34.21) | 49 (35.51) | 55 (32.93) | 38 (31.15) | 26 (35.14) | 12 (30.77) | 66 (28.09) | 15 (28.85) |
| Small towns/villages | 136 (27.53) | 35 (25.36) | 42 (25.15) | 33 (27.05) | 18 (24.32) | 14 (35.90) | 64 (27.23) | 17 (32.69) |
|
| ||||||||
| Married or cohabitating without children at home | 71 (14.37) | 22 (15.83) | 23 (13.77) | 15 (12.30) | 12 (16.22) | <10 | 42 (17.87) | <10 |
| Married or cohabitating with children at home | 203 (41.09) | 61 (43.88) | 71 (42.51) | 43 (35.25) | 27 (36.49) | 10 (25.64) | 88 (37.45) | 16 (30.77) |
| Single without children at home | 158 (31.98) | 36 (25.9) | 61 (36.53) | 49 (40.16) | 25 (33.78) | 23 (58.97) | 83 (35.32) | 18 (34.62) |
| Single with children at home | 62 (12.55) | 20 (14.39) | 12 (7.19) | 15 (12.30) | 10 (13.51) | <10 | 22 (9.36) | <10 |
aFrom people with MS that met the inclusion criteria for our study, only 499 of those had at least one relevant comorbidity at the time of MS diagnosis, i.e., they were belonging in at least one of the defined six comorbidity groups, or had no comorbidity (n = 140). Therefore, results in this table are presented for the analysis population of this study, i.e. for n = 639 people with MS. Since PwMS can present with multiple comorbidities, they can be included in more than one comorbidity group (out of these six comorbidity groups).
Figure 1.Trajectories of healthcare costs (HC) and productivity losses (PL), respectively, among the 499 people with MS who had any comorbidity (dotted lines represent 95% confident intervals), over the future seven years from date when diagnosed with MS in 2006.
Figure 2.Trajectories of healthcare costs (HC) and productivity losses (PL), respectively, among the 140 people with MS but without comorbidities (dotted lines represent 95% confident intervals), over the future seven years from date when diagnosed with MS in 2006.