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OBJECTIVE: To evaluate total annual all-cause, gastrointestinal-related, and symptom-related healthcare costs among chronic constipation (CC) patients and estimate incremental all-cause healthcare costs of CC patients relative to matched controls. METHODS: Patients aged ≥18 years with continuous medical and pharmacy benefit eligibility in 2010 were identified from the HealthCore Integrated Research Database. CC patients had ≥2 medical claims for constipation (ICD-9-CM code 564. 0x) ≥90 days apart or ≥1 medical claim for constipation plus ≥1 constipation-related pharmacy claim ≥90 days apart, and no medical claims for irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). Sub-groups with and without abdominal symptoms were classified according to the presence/absence of abdominal pain (ICD-9-CM code 789. 0x) and bloating (ICD-9-CM code 787. 3x). Controls without claims for constipation, abdominal pain, bloating, or IBS or constipation-related prescriptions were randomly selected and matched 1: 1 with CC patients on age, gender, health plan region, and plan type. Generalized linear models with bootstrapping evaluated incremental all-cause costs attributable to CC, adjusting for demographics and comorbidities. RESULTS: Overall, 14, 854 patients (n = 7427 each in CC and control groups) were identified (mean age = 59 years; 75. 4% female). Mean annual all-cause costs for CC patients were 11, 991 (2010 USD), with nearly half (44. 8%) attributable to outpatient services, including physician office visits and other outpatient services (10. 0% and 34. 8%, respectively). GI-related costs comprised 33. 7% of total all-cause costs. Symptom-related costs accounted for 10. 5%, primarily driven by costs of other outpatient services (50. 6%). Adjusted incremental all-cause costs associated with CC were 3508 per patient per year (4446 for CC with abdominal symptoms; 2783 for CC without abdominal symptoms), of which 81. 0% were from medical services. Incremental cost estimates may be over- or under-estimated due to classification based on claims. CONCLUSIONS: CC imposes a substantial burden in direct healthcare costs in a commercially insured population, mainly attributable to greater use of medical services.
Cai et al. (Tue,) studied this question.