1. Economic burden of inadequate symptom control among US commercially insured patients with irritable bowel syndrome with diarrhea
- Author
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Kush Mathur, Jessica L. Buono, David A Andrae, and Amelia J Averitt
- Subjects
Adult ,Diarrhea ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Office Visits ,Cholinergic Antagonists ,Irritable Bowel Syndrome ,Insurance Claim Review ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cost of Illness ,Health care ,medicine ,Humans ,Symptom control ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Medical prescription ,Antidiarrheals ,Intensive care medicine ,Irritable bowel syndrome ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Health Services ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Hospitalization ,Resource use ,Female ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Medical emergency ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Models, Econometric ,Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors - Abstract
To assess healthcare resource use and costs among irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) with diarrhea (IBS-D) patients with and without evidence of inadequate symptom control on current prescription therapies and estimate incremental all-cause costs associated with inadequate symptom control.IBS-D patients aged ≥18 years with ≥1 medical claim for IBS (ICD-9-CM 564.1x) and either ≥2 claims for diarrhea (ICD-9-CM 787.91, 564.5x), ≥1 claim for diarrhea plus ≥1 claim for abdominal pain (ICD-9-CM 789.0x), or ≥1 claim for diarrhea plus ≥1 pharmacy claim for a symptom-related prescription within 1 year of an IBS diagnosis were identified from the Truven Health MarketScan database. Inadequate symptom control, resource use, and costs were assessed up to 1 year following the index date. Inadequate symptom control included any of the following: (1) switch or (2) addition of new symptom-related therapy; (3) IBS-D-related inpatient or emergency room (ER) admission; (4) IBS-D-related medical procedure; (5) diagnosis of condition indicating treatment failure; or (6) use of a more aggressive prescription. Generalized linear models assessed incremental costs of inadequate symptom control.Of 20,624 IBS-D patients (mean age = 48.5 years; 77.8% female), 66.4% had evidence of inadequate symptom control. Compared to those without inadequate symptom control, patients with evidence of inadequate symptom control had significantly more hospitalizations (12.0% vs 6.0%), ER visits (37.1% vs 22.6%), use of outpatient services (73.0% vs 60.7%), physician office visits (mean 11.0 vs 8.1), and prescription fills (mean 40.0 vs 26.7) annually (all p .01). Incremental costs associated with inadequate symptom control were $3,065 (2013 US dollars), and were driven by medical service costs ($2,391; 78%).Study included US commercially insured patients only and inferred IBS-D status and inadequate symptom control from claims.Inadequate symptom control associated with available IBS-D therapies represents a significant economic burden for both payers and IBS-D patients.
- Published
- 2017
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