Abstract

Objective: To investigate healthcare costs and contributors to costs for multiple chronic conditions (MCCs), common clusters of conditions and their impact on cost and utilization.Methods: This was a cross-sectional analysis of US financial claims data representative of the US population, including Medicare, Medicaid, and Commercial insurance claims in 2015. Outcome measures included healthcare costs and contributors; ranking of clusters of conditions according to frequency, strength of association and unsupervised (k-means) analysis; the impact of clustering on costs and contributors to costs.Results: Of 1,878,951 patients, 931,045(49.6%) had MCCs, 56.5% weighted to the US population. Mean age was 53.0 years (SD16.7); 393,121(42.20%) were male. Mean annual healthcare spending was $12,601, ranging from $4,385 (2 conditions) to $33,874 (11 conditions), with spending increasing by 22-fold for inpatient services, 6-fold for outpatient services, 4.5-fold for generic drugs, and 4.2-fold for branded drugs. Cluster ranking using the 3 methodologies yielded similar results: highest ranked clusters included metabolic syndrome (12.2% of US insured patients), age related diseases (7.7%), renal failure (5.6%), respiratory disorders (4.5%), cardiovascular disease(CVD) (4.3%), cancers (4.1–4.3%), mental health-related clusters (1.0–1.5%), and HIV/AIDS (0.2%). Highest spending was in HIV/AIDS clusters ($48,293), mental health-related clusters ($38,952–$40,637), renal disease ($38,551), and CVD ($37,155); with 89.9% of spending on outpatient and inpatient care combined, and 10.1% on medication.Conclusion and Relevance: Over 57% of insured patients in the US may have MCCs. MCC Clustering is frequent and is associated with healthcare utilization. The findings favor health system redesign toward a multiple condition approach for clusters of chronic conditions, alongside other cost-containment measures for MCCs.

Highlights

  • The increasing global burden of non-communicable diseases (NCDs), accounting for three in five of global deaths [1], has long been recognized as a global priority

  • No studies have reported on the impact that clusters have on the healthcare cost burden from multiple chronic conditions (MCCs) in a comprehensive manner

  • Conditions occurring in over 95% of patients with these clusters included hypertension, high cholesterol, diabetes, cardiovascular disease (CVD), depression, anxiety, chronic pain, osteoarthritis, allergy, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), male and female cancers, chronic renal failure, and HIV/AIDS

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Summary

Introduction

The increasing global burden of non-communicable diseases (NCDs), accounting for three in five of global deaths [1], has long been recognized as a global priority. Evidence from a handful of studies reporting on the burden from MCCs to date suggest that this phenomenon results in markedly different disease, cost and personal burdens. Most studies have asserted a positive association between MCC and healthcare expenditures [3], some reporting a doubling in costs with each subsequent condition [4, 5]. Certain conditions cluster together more frequently such as stroke and Alzheimer’s disease, and communicable conditions such as TB and HIV/AIDS with diabetes and CVD, respectively [10, 11]. No studies have reported on the impact that clusters have on the healthcare cost burden from MCCs in a comprehensive manner

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