Abstract

BackgroundIt is estimated that at present there are over 10 million rare disease patients in China. Recently an increased focus from policy perspective has been placed on rare diseases management. Improved disease definitions and the releases of local and national rare disease lists are some of the steps taken already. Despite these developments, few Chinese rare disease-related epidemiology and economic studies exist, thus hindering assessment of the true burden of rare diseases. For a rare disease with an effective treatment, this is a particularly important aspect due to the often-high cost associated.ObjectiveThe goal of this study is to address the data scarcity on the subject of rare diseases economic impact in China. We aim to address an existing knowledge gap and to provide a timely analysis of the economic burden of 23 rare diseases in Shanghai, China.MethodsWe utilized the data from the Health Information Exchange system of Shanghai and employed statistical modeling to analyze the economic burden of rare diseases with an effective treatment in Shanghai.ResultsFirst, we described the actual direct medical expenditure and analyzed its associated factors. Second, we found age, disease type, number of complications, and payment type were significantly associated with rare disease medical direct costs. Third, a generalized linear model was employed to estimate the annual direct cost. The mean direct medical cost was estimated as ¥9588 (US$1521) for inpatients and ¥1060 (US$168) for outpatients, and was over ¥15 million (~US$2.4 million) per year overall.ConclusionOur study is one of the first quantifying the economic burden of an extensive set of rare diseases in Shanghai and China. Our results can serve to inform healthcare-focused policy making, contribute to the increase of public awareness, and incentivize development of rare-disease strategies and treatments specific to the Chinese context.

Highlights

  • It is estimated that at present there are over 10 million rare disease patients in China

  • This study focuses on the Shanghai rare diseases list and provides much-needed analysis of the economic burden, focusing on direct medical cost in rare diseases in Shanghai

  • We described the actual direct cost of 23 rare diseases with effective treatment defined in the Shanghai rare disease list, and found that age, disease type, number of complications, and payment types were significantly associated with economic burden imposed

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Summary

Introduction

It is estimated that at present there are over 10 million rare disease patients in China. An increased focus from policy perspective has been placed on rare diseases management. Improved disease definitions and the releases of local and national rare disease lists are some of the steps taken already. Despite these developments, few Chinese rare disease-related epidemiology and economic studies exist, hindering assessment of the true burden of rare diseases. The World Health Organization (WHO) defines rare diseases as one with prevalence between 0.65–1‰, some countries use different definitions [1]. For a rare disease with effective treatments, there is especially a strong health interest relating to their economic burden. Recent studies have reported economic burden of diseases such as hemophilia [3–5], cystic fibrosis [6, 7], phenylketonuria [8], and fragile X

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