The presence of comorbid cardiovascular disease in patients with rheumatoid arthritis significantly increased adjusted annual healthcare costs by $2,741 compared to patients with rheumatoid arthritis alone.
Cohort (n=10,298)
Mean Difference: 2741
Absolute Event Rate: 14145% vs 11404%
p-value: p=<0.001
OBJECTIVE: To examine resource utilization and direct healthcare cost associated with comorbid cardiovascular disease (CVD) and depression among patients with prevalent rheumatoid arthritis (RA) based on analyses of retrospective healthcare claims data. METHODS: The index date was set as the first observed claim with an RA diagnosis. Patients were required to be >or=18 years of age, to have received RA-related treatment during the pre-index period, and to have 12-month pre- and post-index data. Based on pre-index utilization, patients were classified into 4 diagnosis groups: RA alone, RA+CVD, RA+depression, and RA+CVD+depression. Analyses focused on annual differences in costs between patients with RA alone and those with CVD and/or depression. A generalized linear model was applied to control for demographic and clinical characteristics and to estimate cohort-specific adjusted mean annual healthcare cost. RESULTS: Of 10, 298 patients, 8, 916 had RA alone (86. 6%), 608 had RA+CVD (5. 9%), 716 had RA+depression (7. 0%), and 58 had RA+CVD+depression (0. 5%). All patients with CVD and/or depression incurred significantly higher followup costs compared with patients with RA alone. Adjusted annual mean healthcare costs were highest for RA+CVD (US14, 145), followed by RA+CVD+depression (13, 513), RA+depression (12, 225), and RA alone (11, 404). Although patients with CVD and/or depression had a greater rate of RA-related hospitalization, adjusted RA-related healthcare costs did not reflect any statistically significant differences as compared to the RA-alone cohort. CONCLUSION: A significant proportion (13. 4%) of patients with prevalent RA have comorbid CVD and/or depression. The presence of these conditions significantly affects annual healthcare costs as well as specific RA-related utilization patterns.
Joyce et al. (Tue,) conducted a cohort in Rheumatoid arthritis with comorbid cardiovascular disease and/or depression (n=10,298). Comorbid cardiovascular disease (CVD) vs. Rheumatoid arthritis alone was evaluated on Adjusted annual mean total healthcare costs (MD 2741, p=<0.001). The presence of comorbid cardiovascular disease in patients with rheumatoid arthritis significantly increased adjusted annual healthcare costs by $2,741 compared to patients with rheumatoid arthritis alone.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: