Literature DB >> 35476081

Increase in direct costs for health systems due to lupus nephritis: the case of Colombia.

Sergio I Prada1,2, Ana M Pérez3, Ivana Nieto-Aristizábal1, Gabriel J Tobón2.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Lupus nephritis is one of the most severe complications of systemic lupus erythematosus and it has been estimated that can occur in up to 60% of patients. Direct costs of lupus nephritis have not been studied in developing countries. This study aimed to describe lupus nephritis direct costs in Colombia.
METHODS: Administrative data from two Colombian health maintenance organizations for 2014 and 2015 was obtained. An algorithm based on the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems 10th revision codes was developed to identify patients with lupus nephritis and lupus nephritis under study.
RESULTS: The average annual per-patient, all-claims, all-cause direct cost for lupus nephritis was US$ 12,624, 7.5 times higher than the average lupus patient without lupus nephritis. For lupus nephritis cases under study, estimated direct cost was US$ 3,664, 2 times higher than average lupus patient in Colombia. Difference in lupus nephritis patients is mainly accounted for the cost and frequency of procedures, exceeding by a factor of 5 the cost for durable medical equipment and the cost for drugs, respectively.
CONCLUSION: Lupus patients who progress to lupus nephritis stage increased seven-fold the average annual per-patient, all-claims, and all-cause direct cost for the Colombian health system.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2022        PMID: 35476081      PMCID: PMC9018061          DOI: 10.31744/einstein_journal/2022AO6553

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Einstein (Sao Paulo)        ISSN: 1679-4508


INTRODUCTION

Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a chronic, autoimmune and systemic disease with the potential to affect any organ or system. It is well known that renal involvement, lupus nephritis, is the most severe complication due to its association with progression to end-stage renal disease (ESRD), and mortality.( Lupus nephritis occurs in 38.5% of patients with recent diagnosis of SLE,( in the first five years of the disease in the majority of cases( and it has been described that 60% of SLE patients will develop the complication through the disease evolution.( In a study conducted in SLE hospitalized patients, lupus nephritis was the most common organ involvement during 4 years.( Regarding ethnicity it predominance has affected by 20% of black people and 52% of Asian Pacific Islanders.( Specifically, in Colombia, the population is a mixture of black, white and indigenous peoples. This ethnicity confers higher risk of developing lupus nephritis as it has been demonstrated before.( Also, lupus nephritis affects more men than women, and contrary to what has been seen in SLE without the complication,( it is more often seen among younger patients.( In pediatric patients, it occurs in 50-75% of them and the vast majority of them have developed the complication in the first two years of SLE diagnosis, and Hispanic population is one of the ethnicities at higher risk.( However, the histological form of presentation of lupus nephritis has no significant differences compared with Caucasians.( The confirmed diagnosis remains dependent on a renal biopsy, a procedure that is not only invasive but costly as well. It may also be needed during the course of the disease when severe flares occur or discard histological transformation.( However, some approaches based on urinary biomarkers are being proposed to ameliorate these issues in the future.( The main treatment strategies consist of an induction scheme of cyclophosphamide (or mofetil mycophenolate) followed by mofetil mycophenolate or other immunosuppressants for maintenance. In spite of adequate treatment, renal flares have an incidence of 27%- 66%.( Due to its less favorable prognosis, lupus nephritis is associated with higher rates of hospitalization, procedures such as dialysis, and surgery in cases of renal transplantation.( All the above mentioned healthcare resources, act as determinants of an increase in the direct costs of lupus nephritis.( The literature on direct cost of these patients is concentrated in the developed world. A study in Canada with a cohort of 141 patients conducted between 2004 and 2009 found direct cost of outpatient services associated with SLE with lupus nephritis totalizing Canadian US$ 12,597 Canadian dollar compared with Canadian US$ 10,585 in those without lupus nephritis.( A study in the United States (US) with 2,298 patients from 1999 to 2005, estimated that lupus nephritis had a cost of US$ 27,463 in the first year including all outpatient and inpatient healthcare services, after this period cost has increased.( This study also showed that patients with lupus nephritis were more than twice as costly as patients without the disease. Another paper from the US with 15,590 patients showed that between 2006 and 2008, patients with lupus nephritis spent US$ 6,029 in pharmacy, US$ 15,267 in outpatient services, and US$ 9,292 in hospitalization. In contrast, patients without lupus nephritis had a cost of US$ 3,190; US$ 6,202 and US$ 2,636, respectively.( The Colombian health system design follows the managed competition principles. The Ministry of Health defines the national benefits package and pays a per capita premium to health plans. Enrollment in health plans is mandatory, so health plans compete to attract members. Providers of healthcare are either private or public and also compete to be part of health plan’s network. The system is divided in two subsystems. One called “contributive” because it is financed by employer-employee contributions and covers the working population and their families. The other one is called “subsidized” because it is financed by the national government and cover the poor. There is a private insurance market in which people may buy additional coverage. Lupus treatment is partially covered by the national government-defined benefits package. Treatment beyond such coverage is obtained either by judicialization or by private insurance. In a previous paper published by our group, annual direct costs of lupus care resulted in US$ 2,355, in average, per-patient, all-claims, and all-cause.(

OBJECTIVE

We aimed to show the all-claims, all-cause cost of lupus nephritis patients for a health system for the first time in a developing country using administrative claims data.

METHODS

Subjects

This is a descriptive data study. We used administrative claims from two private health maintenance organizations (HMOs) for years 2014 and 2015. Data was obtained under an academic agreement between Fundación Valle del Lili and Universidad Icesi, Cali, Colombia and both organizations. As this is a study based on claims data, an Ethics Committee approval was not required. In 2015, together both HMOs insured around 4 million lives accounting for 17% of the national health insurance plan for the working population, and almost half of the enrollees in Colombia´s southwest region.( Two datasets were linked by a unique identifier. The first database corresponds to claims paid for by these HMOs using funds received from the national government to cover the government-defined public benefits package. The second, claims of services did not include in the national public benefits package, but also paid for by the government using a reimbursement mechanism. This is a characteristic of the Colombian system by which high-cost drugs or procedures are allowed in case by case basis following judicial rulings.( The public benefits package data includes demographics as well as services rendered. Demographics include: gender, age, city of residence, educational level, and enrolment types (primarily-insured or beneficiaries). Services rendered include: a unique patient identification, date when the service was provided, type of service (inpatient, outpatient, in-home, and emergency care), the mechanism of reimbursement (capitation or fee-for-service), municipality, primary diagnosis, service type (drug, procedures, durable medical equipment - DME), and the amount paid for by the insurer to the provider. The non- public benefits package data include: patient identification, service date, amount reimbursed, and service type (drugs, procedures, and DME).

Inclusion criteria

Lupus patients were selected using the tenth revision of the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems 10th (ICD-10). Diagnosis included were: discoid lupus erythematosus (DLE), L930; subacute cutaneous lupus erythematosus, L931; drug-induced SLE, M320; SLE with organ or system involvement, M321; other forms of SLE, M328; and unspecified SLE, M329. After excluding the patients that did not have the diagnosis in both years (2014 and 2015), the final sample was 3,592 patients.( To identify lupus nephritis patients, we developed an algorithm using specific rules for diagnoses, drugs, and procedures information as present in the datasets. First, the ICD-10 was used for this purpose. The following diagnoses were included as indicators of the disease (Figure 1):
Figure 1

Algorithm for ion of cases

Nephrotic syndrome with other morphologic changes, N048; Acute kidney failure with tubular necrosis, N170; Acute kidney failure with acute cortical necrosis, N171; Other acute kidney failure, N178; Acute kidney failure, unspecified, N179; Unspecified kidney failure, N19; End-stage renal disease, N180; Other chronic kidney diseases, N188; Chronic kidney disease, unspecified, N189; Kidney transplant status, Z940. International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems 10th (ICD-10). Second, we used the record of outpatient drugs paid for by the insurer associated with the unique ID of the patient during the period of the study. The Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical (ATC) classification system was used. Codes that were considered highly likely associated with lupus nephritis are the following: Cyclophosphamide, L01AA01; Mycophenolic acid, L04AA06. Third, the following CD-10 revision procedure classification system were included: Kidney biopsy; Kidney transplant; Hemodialysis; Peritoneal dialysis. Patients were classified as lupus nephritis if they had either a diagnosis and underwent a related procedure, or had a diagnosis and were treated with one of the listed drugs. However, not all patients coincided perfectly, filling only one criterion or the other. To avoid discarding likely cases of lupus nephritis, a category called “suspected lupus nephritis” was included in the study, composed of patients identified by one method. The classification algorithm was applied to years 2014 and 2015. Patients that were identified in 2014, but not in 2015, were revised in detail by one of the authors, a practitioner rheumatologist who studied every claim of those patients. After the rheumatologist analysis, 23 false positive cases of lupus nephritis were excluded, because they presented additional diagnoses to which renal involvement was attributable, such as toxic nephropathy, or were not taking any immunosuppressant drugs. The number of patients with lupus nephritis in 2014 and 2015 were 113 and 135, respectively. The cases of suspected lupus nephritis were 297 and 459, respectively (Figure 1).

COST

Direct cost for the government funded Colombian health system are defined as payments made by insurers to providers. Cost was estimated by summing all-cause public benefits package and non-public benefits package services rendered and paid for lupus nephritis patients. The official currency of Colombian is the peso (COP), however, in the results section figures are in dollars for comparability with the international literature. We used the average exchange rate from both years (2,372 COP per 1 US$) to convert from COP to US$. Annual all-cause all-claims direct cost from public benefits package was calculated by type of service (drugs, procedures, and DME), point of service (urgent care, inpatient, outpatient, and in-home). No statistical inference tests were performed between years because the data is not a sample but a population of patients for both insurers.

RESULTS

In table 1, direct average all-cause and all-claims cost per patient with lupus nephritis is shown by gender and patient classification. Average annual per-patient, all claims, all-cause direct cost for lupus in general was reported elsewhere.( Patients with lupus nephritis were 7,46 times as costly as patients without lupus nephritis in 2015. Suspected-lupus nephritis patients were 2,16 times as costly as patients without lupus nephritis in 2015.
Table 1

Average direct cost for lupus and lupus nephritis patients by gender and type

Costs by gender and typenMean ($)SD



2014201520142015Change (%)20142015
All3,5923,5922,1632,3558.95,4965,674
By gender       
Men3563562,3622,253- 4.64,7604,363
Women3,2363,2362,1412,36610.55,5725,800
By type       
No LN3,1822,9981,6021,6925.63,6733,868
LN11313511,40512,62410.715,22017,244
LN under study2974594,6563,664- 21.39,5745,642

LN: lupus nephritis; SD: standard deviation.

LN: lupus nephritis; SD: standard deviation. Table 2 gives direct cost paid for by insurers per patient only for lupus nephritis patients by type of service, point of service and by type of expenditure. By type of service procedures are the most frequent and the more expensive claims per patient. Procedures cost 5.7 times as drugs and 4.9 times as DME. By point of service outpatient and inpatient visits are the most frequent claims by patient. Non-PBP services comprise 31% and 25% of total direct cost for 2014 and 2015, respectively.
Table 2

Average direct cost per patient with lupus nephritis by type and point of service

Costs by type and point of servicenMean ($) SD



2014201520142015Change (%)20142015
PBP by type of service       
Drugs1101331,3121,4117.62,0912,801
DME84811,2111,53126.45,5025,306
Procedures1131356,4337,54217.28,21910,935
PBP by point of service      
Urgent care899022132346.2275517
Outpatient1131352,8864,65161.23,9974,264
Inpatient1031006,0776,70410.310,88314,358
In-home108120303152.8300461
Average direct cost per patient user1131358,6109,85114.411,38815,154
Non-PBP891163,5483,228-9.09,5348,369
PBP and Non PBP11313511,40512,62410.715,22017,244

SD: standard deviation; PBP: public benefit package; DME: durable medical equipment.

SD: standard deviation; PBP: public benefit package; DME: durable medical equipment. Table 3 direct cost paid for by insurers per patient only for suspected-lupus nephritis patients by type of service, point of service and by type of expenditure. Results are similar to lupus nephritis patients, but monetary outlays are between 30% and 40% of confirmed cases.
Table 3

Average direct cost per patient with lupus nephritis under study by type and point of service

 nMean ($) SD
 2014201520142015Change (%)20142015
PBP by type of service      
Drugs286456596587-1.61,9152,224
DME134203402328-18.41,1231,314
Procedures2944552,3281,592-31.64,2312,507
PBP by point of service      
Urgent care150246147124-15.8200197
Outpatient2974591,0551,45938.31,7662,439
Inpatient1952552,9211,394-52.35,7693,343
In-home2321162130-19.8287157
Average direct cost per patient user2974593,0592,306-24.65,3344,011
Non-PBP2203432,1551,818-15.67,2653,968
PBP and non PBP2974594,6563,664-21.39,5745,642

SD: standard deviation; PBP: public benefit package; DME: durable medical equipment.

SD: standard deviation; PBP: public benefit package; DME: durable medical equipment. Table 4 and 5 show the top 10 procedures sorted by cost per procedure in both lupus nephritis and suspected-lupus nephritis in 2014 and 2015. For lupus nephritis, the top 3 procedures were nephrectomy, renal transplantation and intensive care unit (ICU) hospitalization; while for suspected-lupus nephritis the top 4 procedures were ICU hospitalization, intermediate unit care hospitalization, renal biopsy and hospitalization in moderate/high complexity services.
Table 4

Cost per procedure for Lupus nephritis patients (more costly procedures)

Proceduren (Procedure)MeanSDProceduren (Procedure)MeanSD


20142015
Nephrectomy34,2015,014Renal transplantation86,0854,710
ICU hospitalization292,8971,677ICU hospitalization165,2594,093
Renal transplantation132,7162,658Nephrectomy of transplanted or rejected kidney11,227 
Intermediate care unit hospitalization251,027594Hospitalization in moderate-complexity service54992856
Peritoneal dialysis38977108Hospitalization in high-complexity service498851,230
Partial hospitalization/Day hospital2762180Hospitalization in low-complexity service67745771
Hospitalization in moderate-complexity service111680591Hemodialysis414713371
Hospitalization in low-complexity service115614544Class I and II HLA test10655153
Class I and II HLA test12451228Intermediate care unit hospitalization5537374
Renal biopsy30439398Class I HLA test1519 

SD: standard deviation; ICU: intensive care unit; HLA: histocompatibility leucocyte antigen.

Table 5

Cost per procedure for under study- lupus nephritis patients (more costly procedures)

Proceduren (Procedure)MeanSDProceduren (Procedure)MeanSD


20142015
ICU hospitalization252,4961,645ICU hospitalization104,7163,492
Intermediate care unit hospitalization161,8931,578Renal biopsy27660525
Hospitalization in high-complexity service44592498Hospitalization in moderate-complexity service84595490
Hospitalization in low-complexity service146559534Therapeutic plasma exchange1584 
Renal biopsy32510380Hospitalization in high-complexity service87553531

SD: standard deviation; ICU: intensive care unit; HLA: histocompatibility leucocyte antigen.

SD: standard deviation; ICU: intensive care unit; HLA: histocompatibility leucocyte antigen. SD: standard deviation; ICU: intensive care unit; HLA: histocompatibility leucocyte antigen.

DISCUSSION

This paper described all-cause all-claims direct costs paid for by insurers associated with lupus nephritis patients, based on administrative data of patients enrolled for two consecutive years, 2014 and 2015, in two HMOs in Colombia. Of 3,592 patients with lupus diagnosis, we developed an algorithm to identify patients with lupus nephritis under study and lupus nephritis, that accounted for 523 and 594 patients in 2014 and 2015, respectively. We found that all-cause average annual direct costs for these patients to be US$ 11,405 and US$ 12,624 in 2014 and 2015,respectively. Patients with lupus nephritis were 7.46 times as costly as patients without lupus nephritis in 2015. The Lupus erythematosus Cost of Illness in Europe (LUCIE) study evaluated healthcare costs of lupus in 427 patients of five European countries, and reported that one of the predictors of higher costs was renal involvement, adding US$ 711 to the costs.( In Australia, Yeo et al. evaluated 200 patients with lupus from 2013 until 2016, and found that the mean annual direct costs was of US$ 7,413, and again, renal involvement was the organ manifestation that annually incremented costs the majority in 62.5%.( Tanaka et al. studied 295 Japanese patients with lupus from 2010 to 2012, with a mean cost during that period of time of US$ 27,004. They also they divided the disease severity in mild, moderate and severe, for which the costs were US$ 5,549, US$ 15,290, and US$ 43,322, respectively. In these groups, patients with renal manifestations had 78.3% greater costs than those without this disease.( Regarding type of services, we found that for both lupus nephritis and lupus nephritis under study, procedures were the most frequent and costly expense for insurers. By the point of service, inpatient services for lupus nephritis and lupus nephritis under study were the most important in both years, except for lupus nephritis under study in 2015 that was outpatient services. More specifically for lupus nephritis, the most expensive healthcare services per procedure rendered were surgical procedures such as nephrectomy and renal transplantation, while for lupus nephritis under study, it was renal biopsy; for both high complexity hospitalization services including ICU stays. The lack of clinical data prevents us to confirm severity, but costs by type/point of services, are likely associated with patients in more advanced stages or with higher number of comorbidities, which would be proportionally associated with higher all-cause and all-claims costs per-patient. In a similar way, a multicentric study that included patients from the US, Mexico, Korea, Canada and Europe found that in patients with lupus nephritis and with GFR <30mL/minute or ESRD, the dialysis was the most expensive type of service whereas in patients without lupus nephritis, the most expensive issue was the drugs. Also, according to this study, the worse the renal function the higher the five and ten-year cumulative costs as in patients with ESRD that were expected to cost 23-fold that of non-lupus nephritis patients.( Furst et al. compared 907 lupus nephritis patients with controls in the USA, and reported that 98.90% of patients used diagnostic services annually.( Renal biopsy as a mandatory procedure to confirm prognosis and sometimes to follow-up,( surely contributes to the finding of this study. A recent study showed that mortality in Latin population was four times higher than expected.( Lupus nephritis is the main SLE complication associated with death, as well as lupus nephritis patients are at high risk of developing ESRD.( In this way, management guidelines emphasize that the aims of treating lupus nephritis are to favor patients survival, to avoid flares and to preserve kidney function, among others. All of which may be accomplished when accessing multidisciplinary healthcare attention whenever possible.(

Study limitations

Our study is based on administrative data, thus accuracy may be affected by the lack of clinical data.

CONCLUSION

Lupus patients that progressed to lupus nephritis stage showed seven-fold increase of the average annual per-patient, all-claims, all-cause direct cost for the Colombian health system. Lupus nephritis is associated with high morbidity and mortality, adequate access to early and periodical multidisciplinary management that could improve outcomes, and therefore, costs related with complications such as renal replacement therapy and transplant.
  32 in total

1.  Demographic differences in the development of lupus nephritis: a retrospective analysis.

Authors:  Victoria A Seligman; Raymond F Lum; Jean L Olson; Hongzhe Li; Lindsey A Criswell
Journal:  Am J Med       Date:  2002-06-15       Impact factor: 4.965

2.  Anti-malarials exert a protective effect while Mestizo patients are at increased risk of developing SLE renal disease: data from a Latin-American cohort.

Authors:  Guillermo J Pons-Estel; Graciela S Alarcón; Leticia Hachuel; Gabriela Boggio; Daniel Wojdyla; Virginia Pascual-Ramos; Enrique R Soriano; Verónica Saurit; Fernando S Cavalcanti; Renato A Guzman; Marlene Guibert-Toledano; Maria J Sauza Del Pozo; Mary-Carmen Amigo; Magaly Alva; Maria H Esteva-Spinetti; Bernardo A Pons-Estel
Journal:  Rheumatology (Oxford)       Date:  2012-03-02       Impact factor: 7.580

3.  Mestizos with systemic lupus erythematosus develop renal disease early while antimalarials retard its appearance: data from a Latin American cohort.

Authors:  G J Pons-Estel; G S Alarcón; P I Burgos; L Hachuel; G Boggio; D Wojdyla; R Nieto; A Alvarellos; L J Catoggio; M Guibert-Toledano; J Sarano; L Massardo; G M Vásquez; A Iglesias-Gamarra; L T Lavras Costallat; N A Da Silva; J L Alfaro; I Abadi; M I Segami; G Huerta; M H Cardiel; B A Pons-Estel
Journal:  Lupus       Date:  2013-07-15       Impact factor: 2.911

Review 4.  [Renal transplantation in patients with lupus nephritis].

Authors:  Lea Katalinić; Emma Eliasson; Ljubica Bubić-Filipi; Petar Kes; Branimir Anić; Nikolina Basić-Jukić
Journal:  Lijec Vjesn       Date:  2014 Jul-Aug

Review 5.  One year in review 2017: systemic lupus erythematosus.

Authors:  Giuliana Maria Concetta La Paglia; Maria Comasia Leone; Gemma Lepri; Roberta Vagelli; Eleonora Valentini; Alessia Alunno; Chiara Tani
Journal:  Clin Exp Rheumatol       Date:  2017-07-11       Impact factor: 4.473

Review 6.  Systemic lupus erythematosus and the economic perspective: a systematic literature review and points to consider.

Authors:  Giuseppe Turchetti; Jinoos Yazdany; Ilaria Palla; Edward Yelin; Marta Mosca
Journal:  Clin Exp Rheumatol       Date:  2012-10-16       Impact factor: 4.473

7.  Medical costs and healthcare resource use in patients with lupus nephritis and neuropsychiatric lupus in an insured population.

Authors:  Daniel E Furst; Ann Clarke; Ancilla W Fernandes; Tim Bancroft; Kavita Gajria; Warren Greth; Serban R Iorga
Journal:  J Med Econ       Date:  2013-02-11       Impact factor: 2.448

Review 8.  Lupus nephritis.

Authors:  Hans-Joachim Anders; Ramesh Saxena; Ming-Hui Zhao; Ioannis Parodis; Jane E Salmon; Chandra Mohan
Journal:  Nat Rev Dis Primers       Date:  2020-01-23       Impact factor: 52.329

9.  Renal Transplantation and Survival Among Patients With Lupus Nephritis: A Cohort Study.

Authors:  April Jorge; Zachary S Wallace; Na Lu; Yuqing Zhang; Hyon K Choi
Journal:  Ann Intern Med       Date:  2019-01-22       Impact factor: 25.391

10.  The frequency and outcome of lupus nephritis: results from an international inception cohort study.

Authors:  John G Hanly; Aidan G O'Keeffe; Li Su; Murray B Urowitz; Juanita Romero-Diaz; Caroline Gordon; Sang-Cheol Bae; Sasha Bernatsky; Ann E Clarke; Daniel J Wallace; Joan T Merrill; David A Isenberg; Anisur Rahman; Ellen M Ginzler; Paul Fortin; Dafna D Gladman; Jorge Sanchez-Guerrero; Michelle Petri; Ian N Bruce; Mary Anne Dooley; Rosalind Ramsey-Goldman; Cynthia Aranow; Graciela S Alarcón; Barri J Fessler; Kristjan Steinsson; Ola Nived; Gunnar K Sturfelt; Susan Manzi; Munther A Khamashta; Ronald F van Vollenhoven; Asad A Zoma; Manuel Ramos-Casals; Guillermo Ruiz-Irastorza; S Sam Lim; Thomas Stoll; Murat Inanc; Kenneth C Kalunian; Diane L Kamen; Peter Maddison; Christine A Peschken; Soren Jacobsen; Anca Askanase; Chris Theriault; Kara Thompson; Vernon Farewell
Journal:  Rheumatology (Oxford)       Date:  2015-09-05       Impact factor: 7.580

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