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Cost of Disease Progression in Patients with Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia, Acute Myeloid Leukemia, and Non‐Hodgkin's Lymphoma

机译:慢性淋巴细胞白血病患者疾病进展成本,急性髓性白血病和非霍奇金淋巴瘤

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Abstract Introduction To reduce health care costs and improve care, payers and physician groups are switching to quality‐based and episodic or bundled‐care models. Disease progression and associated costs may affect these models, particularly if such programs do not account for differences in disease severity and progression risk within the cohort. This study estimated the incremental cost of disease progression in patients diagnosed with chronic lymphoid leukemia (CLL), acute myeloid leukemia (AML), and non‐Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) and compared costs among patients with and without progression. Methods This was a retrospective study using U.S. administrative claims data from commercial and Medicare Advantage health care enrollees with evidence of CLL, AML, and NHL and systemic antineoplastic agent use from July 1, 2006 to August 31, 2014. Outcome measures included disease progression, 12‐month health care costs, and 3‐year cumulative predictive health care costs. Results Of 1,056 patients with CLL, 514 patients with AML, and 7,601 patients with NHL, 31.1% of patients with CLL, 63.8% of those with AML, and 36.9% of those with NHL had evidence of disease progression. Among patients with CLL and NHL, adjusted and unadjusted health care costs were significantly higher among progressors versus nonprogressors. Per‐patient‐per‐month costs, accounting for variable follow‐up time, were almost twice as high among progressors versus nonprogressors in patients with CLL, AML, and NHL. In each of the three cancer types, the longer disease progression was delayed, the lower the health care costs. Conclusion Progression of CLL, AML, and NHL was associated with higher health care costs over a 12‐month period. Delaying cancer progression resulted in a substantial cost reduction in patients with all three cancer types. Implications for Practice Data on the rates and incremental health care costs of disease progression in patients with hematologic malignancies are lacking. This study estimated the incremental costs of disease progression in patients diagnosed with chronic lymphocytic leukemia, acute myeloid leukemia, and non‐Hodgkin's lymphoma and compared health care costs in patients with and without evidence of disease progression in a real‐world population. The data obtained in this study will assist future studies in quantifying the cost impact of decreased progression rates and will inform payers and physician groups about setting rates for episode and bundled payment programs.
机译:摘要介绍,以减少医疗费用,改善护理,付款人和医师团体正在切换到基于质量的和捆绑或捆绑的护理模型。疾病进展和相关成本可能会影响这些模型,特别是如果这些计划不考虑疾病严重程度和群组内的进展风险的差异。本研究估计患有慢性淋巴白血病(CLL),急性髓性白血病(AML)和非霍奇金淋巴瘤(NHL)的患者疾病进展的增量成本和非霍奇金淋巴瘤(NHL),并在没有进展的患者的比较成本。方法这是一项回顾性研究,采用商业和医疗保险优势来自商业和医疗保险优势医疗保健入学人员的回顾性研究,其证据来自2006年7月1日至2014年7月1日至8月31日的CLL,AML和NHL和全身抗肿瘤剂使用。结果措施包括疾病进展, 12个月的医疗费用和3年的累积预测性医疗费用。结果1,056例CLL,514例AML患者和7,601名NHL患者,31.1%的CLL患者,63.8%,患有AML的63.8%,36.9%的NHL有疾病进展的证据。在CLL和NHL的患者中,进展与非进股人士之间的调整和未经调节的医疗费用显着提高。每月每月费用,可变随访时间的成本几乎是CLL,AML和NHL患者的前进者与非进口者的两倍。在三种癌症类型中的每一种中,较长的疾病进展被延迟,保健成本越低。结论CLL,AML和NHL的进展与12个月内的医疗费用更高。延迟癌症进展导致所有三种癌症类型患者的成本大幅减少。缺乏血液学恶性肿瘤患者疾病进展的实践数据的影响。本研究估计患有慢性淋巴细胞白血病,急性髓白血病和非霍奇金淋巴瘤的患者疾病进展的增量成本,并在真实世界中患有疾病进展的患者的保健成本。本研究中获得的数据将有助于降低进展率下降的成本影响的未来研究,并通知付款人和医生群体关于加集和捆绑支付方案的设定利率。

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