Societal economic burden and determinants of costs for atopic dermatitis
(2022) In JEADV Clinical Practice 1(4). p.326-343- Abstract
Background: Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a common inflammatory skin disease while the economic burden of AD by severity is not adequately understood. Objective: To estimate the societal economic burden and to identify cost determinants of AD. Methods: In this population-based, controlled cohort study in Sweden, patients with AD were identified through diagnosis codes in primary or secondary care or by dispensed medications using administrative healthcare registers. A reference cohort without AD was randomly selected from the general population. Healthcare costs (primary/secondary care visits and dispensed medication) and indirect costs (care for sick children and long-term sick leave for adults) were calculated annually. AD patients were... (More)
Background: Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a common inflammatory skin disease while the economic burden of AD by severity is not adequately understood. Objective: To estimate the societal economic burden and to identify cost determinants of AD. Methods: In this population-based, controlled cohort study in Sweden, patients with AD were identified through diagnosis codes in primary or secondary care or by dispensed medications using administrative healthcare registers. A reference cohort without AD was randomly selected from the general population. Healthcare costs (primary/secondary care visits and dispensed medication) and indirect costs (care for sick children and long-term sick leave for adults) were calculated annually. AD patients were stratified by age (paediatric [age < 12], adolescent [12 ≤ age < 18] or adult [age ≥ 18]), and severity (mild-to-moderate [M2M] or severe AD) and matched to the reference cohort. Results: Compared with controls, the annual mean per-patient direct healthcare costs in the first year following diagnosis were €941 and €1259 higher in paediatric patients with M2M and severe AD, respectively. In the first year following diagnosis, the mean indirect cost for care of sick children was €69 and €78 higher per patient in M2M and severe AD, respectively. In adolescents with M2M and severe AD, direct healthcare costs were €816 and €1260 higher, respectively. In adults, healthcare costs were €1583 and €2963 higher in patients with M2M and severe AD, respectively and indirect costs were €148 and €263 higher compared with controls. Management of comorbid medical conditions was an important driver of incremental healthcare costs. Total incremental societal economic burden for AD was €351 and €96 million higher in patients with M2M and severe AD, respectively, compared to controls. Conclusion: AD is associated with a significant societal economic burden primarily driven by the cost burden of M2M AD due to the high prevalence of this population. Regardless of severity level, management of non-AD comorbidities is a major driver of total costs.
(Less)
- author
- organization
- publishing date
- 2022-12
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- atopic dermatitis, economic burden, eczema, epidemiology, healthcare costs, indirect costs, public health research
- in
- JEADV Clinical Practice
- volume
- 1
- issue
- 4
- pages
- 18 pages
- publisher
- Wiley
- external identifiers
-
- scopus:85181477543
- ISSN
- 2768-6566
- DOI
- 10.1002/jvc2.74
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 939ed6cd-9aec-404d-ab7a-b302aa972c12
- date added to LUP
- 2024-02-08 15:50:23
- date last changed
- 2024-02-08 16:24:59
@article{939ed6cd-9aec-404d-ab7a-b302aa972c12, abstract = {{<p>Background: Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a common inflammatory skin disease while the economic burden of AD by severity is not adequately understood. Objective: To estimate the societal economic burden and to identify cost determinants of AD. Methods: In this population-based, controlled cohort study in Sweden, patients with AD were identified through diagnosis codes in primary or secondary care or by dispensed medications using administrative healthcare registers. A reference cohort without AD was randomly selected from the general population. Healthcare costs (primary/secondary care visits and dispensed medication) and indirect costs (care for sick children and long-term sick leave for adults) were calculated annually. AD patients were stratified by age (paediatric [age < 12], adolescent [12 ≤ age < 18] or adult [age ≥ 18]), and severity (mild-to-moderate [M2M] or severe AD) and matched to the reference cohort. Results: Compared with controls, the annual mean per-patient direct healthcare costs in the first year following diagnosis were €941 and €1259 higher in paediatric patients with M2M and severe AD, respectively. In the first year following diagnosis, the mean indirect cost for care of sick children was €69 and €78 higher per patient in M2M and severe AD, respectively. In adolescents with M2M and severe AD, direct healthcare costs were €816 and €1260 higher, respectively. In adults, healthcare costs were €1583 and €2963 higher in patients with M2M and severe AD, respectively and indirect costs were €148 and €263 higher compared with controls. Management of comorbid medical conditions was an important driver of incremental healthcare costs. Total incremental societal economic burden for AD was €351 and €96 million higher in patients with M2M and severe AD, respectively, compared to controls. Conclusion: AD is associated with a significant societal economic burden primarily driven by the cost burden of M2M AD due to the high prevalence of this population. Regardless of severity level, management of non-AD comorbidities is a major driver of total costs.</p>}}, author = {{Ortsäter, Gustaf and De Geer, Anna and Rieem Dun, Alexander and Geale, Kirk and Lindberg, Ingrid and Thyssen, Jacob Pontoppidan and von Kobyletzki, Laura B. and Metsini, Alexandra and Henrohn, Dan and Neregård, Petra and Cha, Amy and Cappelleri, Joseph C. and Romero, William and Neary, Maureen P.}}, issn = {{2768-6566}}, keywords = {{atopic dermatitis; economic burden; eczema; epidemiology; healthcare costs; indirect costs; public health research}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{4}}, pages = {{326--343}}, publisher = {{Wiley}}, series = {{JEADV Clinical Practice}}, title = {{Societal economic burden and determinants of costs for atopic dermatitis}}, url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jvc2.74}}, doi = {{10.1002/jvc2.74}}, volume = {{1}}, year = {{2022}}, }