Abstract

Abstract Objectives To estimate the direct healthcare cost progression from before to after systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) diagnosis and to compare healthcare costs by disease severity. Methods Patients with incident SLE diagnosed between 2008 and 2018 were identified from the Korean National Health Insurance database. Annual direct healthcare costs for 5 years before and after SLE were estimated and compared with those of age-, sex- and calendar month-matched (1:4) controls, without SLE. Direct healthcare costs were compared by disease severity of SLE using regression analysis. Results Among 11 173 patients with SLE and 45 500 subjects without SLE, annual direct healthcare costs per person increased in the year before SLE diagnosis and peaked in the first year after diagnosis. They were 7.7-fold greater in the SLE patients than in the subjects without SLE ($5871 vs $759). Severe SLE was associated with 3.284-fold (95% CI: 3.075, 3.507) higher annual costs than mild SLE during the year after diagnosis. Older age (age 60–79 years), lupus nephritis, interstitial lung diseases, and comorbidities such as avascular necrosis and chronic kidney disease were associated with higher annual direct healthcare costs (times [95% CI]) in the first year after diagnosis: age 60–69: 1.119 (1.034, 1.211); age 70–79: 1.470 (1.342, 1.611); lupus nephritis: 1.794 (1.711, 1.881); interstitial lung diseases: 1.435 (1.258, 1.638); avascular necrosis: 6.208 (4.541, 8.487); and chronic kidney disease: 1.858 (1.673, 2.064). Conclusion Patients with SLE incurred significantly higher direct healthcare costs than subjects without SLE during the first year after diagnosis. Disease severity, older age, major organ involvements and comorbidities were associated with increased healthcare costs.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call