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CONQUER Scleroderma: association of gastrointestinal tract symptoms in early disease with resource utilization

Authors :
Sarah Luebker
Tracy M Frech
Shervin Assassi
Brian Skaug
Jessica K Gordon
Kimberly Lakin
Elana J Bernstein
Yiming Luo
Virginia D Steen
Ami A Shah
Laura K Hummers
Carrie Richardson
Duncan F Moore
Dinesh Khanna
Flavia V Castelino
Lorinda Chung
Puneet Kapoor
Faye N Hant
Victoria K Shanmugam
John M VanBuren
Jessica Alvey
Monica Harding
Ankoor Shah
Ashima Makol
Dorota Lebiedz-Odrobina
Julie K Thomas
Elizabeth R Volkmann
Jerry A Molitor
Nora Sandorfi
Source :
Rheumatology.
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2023.

Abstract

Objectives SSc is associated with increased health-care resource utilization and economic burden. The Collaborative National Quality and Efficacy Registry (CONQUER) is a US-based collaborative that collects longitudinal follow-up data on SSc patients with Methods CONQUER participants who had completed a baseline and 12-month Gastrointestinal Tract Questionnaire (GIT 2.0) and a Resource Utilization Questionnaire (RUQ) were included in this analysis. Patients were categorized by total GIT 2.0 severity: none-to-mild (0–0.49); moderate (0.50–1.00), and severe-to-very severe (1.01–3.00). Clinical features and medication exposures were examined in each of these categories. The 12-month RUQ responses were summarized by GIT 2.0 score categories at 12 months. Results Among the 211 CONQUER participants who met the inclusion criteria, most (64%) had mild GIT symptoms, 26% had moderate symptoms, and 10% severe GIT symptoms at 12 months. The categorization of GIT total severity score by RUQ showed that more upper endoscopy procedures and inpatient hospitalization occurred in the CONQUER participants with severe GIT symptoms. These patients with severe GIT symptoms also reported the use of more adaptive equipment. Conclusion This report from the CONQUER cohort suggests that severe GIT symptoms result in more resource utilization. It is especially important to understand resource utilization in early disease cohorts when disease activity, rather than damage, primarily contributes to health-related costs of SSc.

Details

ISSN :
14620332 and 14620324
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Rheumatology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........535011c612ac064725688db09eba93d3
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/rheumatology/kead176