September 24, 2013

The impact of chronic hepatitis C on resource utilisation and in-patient mortality for Medicare beneficiaries between 2005 and 2010

Alimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics

Early View (Online Version of Record published before inclusion in an issue)

Original Article

Z. M. Younossi1,2,*, M. Stepanova2, A. Mishra1, C. Venkatesan1, L. Henry2, S. Hunt1,2

Article first published online: 12 SEP 2013

DOI: 10.1111/apt.12485

© 2013 John Wiley & Sons Ltd

Summary

Background

As baby boomers age, chronic hepatitis C (CHC) will become increasingly important in Medicare eligible group.

Aim

To evaluate trends in Medicare resource utilisation for CHC.

Methods

We analysed the Medicare in-patient and out-patient data from 2005 to 2010. For each patient, all claims with CHC as a principal diagnosis were added up and yearly CHC-related spending was calculated.

Results

A total of 48 880 out-patient claims for 21 655 CHC patients and 4884 hospital admission claims for 3092 patients were included. The number of in-patient (1.5–1.6/year) or out-patient (2.2–2.3/year) visits per patient did not change over time, nor did the demographic characteristics of the CHC population. The majority of this population was eligible for Medicare based on disability and the average number of diagnoses per in-patient claim (from 8.11 in 2005 to 8.60 in 2010) and per out-patient claim (from 2.18 in 2005 to 2.71 in 2010) increased (both P < 0.0001). The average total yearly spending per patient increased in the out-patient setting from $488 in 2005 to $584 in 2010 (P = 0.0132) and did not change in the in-patient setting (from $22 245 in 2005 to $23 383 in 2010, P = 0.14). In the multivariate analysis, the number of diagnoses and conditions per claim and the number of in-patient or out-patient procedures per year were the important independent predictors of increased resource utilisation.

Conclusions

Most Medicare beneficiaries with chronic hepatitis C who sought in-patient or out-patient care in 2005–2010 had received Medicare for disability. Although the total resource utilisation did not change, the proportion of patient's responsibility increased.

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