Abstract

BackgroundGliomas are associated with significant healthcare burden, yet reports of costs are scarce. While many costs are unavoidable there may be treatable symptoms contributing to higher costs. We describe healthcare and societal costs in glioma patients at high risk for depression and their family caregivers, and explore relationships between costs and treatable symptoms.MethodsData from a multicenter randomized trial on effects of internet-based therapy for depressive symptoms were used (NTR3223). Costs of self-reported healthcare utilization, medication use, and productivity loss were calculated for patients and caregivers separately. We used generalized linear regression models to predict costs with depressive symptoms, fatigue, cognitive complaints, tumor grade (low-/high-grade), disease status (stable or active/progression), and intervention (use/non-use) as predictors.ResultsMultiple assessments from baseline through 12 months from 91 glioma patients and 46 caregivers were used. Mean overall costs per year were M = €20,587.53 (sd = €30,910.53) for patients and M = €5,581.49 (sd = €13,102.82) for caregivers. In patients, higher healthcare utilization costs were associated with more depressive symptoms; higher medication costs were associated with active/progressive disease. In caregivers, higher overall costs were linked with increased caregiver fatigue, cognitive complaints, and lower patient tumor grade. Higher healthcare utilization costs were related to more cognitive complaints and lower tumor grade. More productivity loss costs were associated with increased fatigue (all P < 0.05).ConclusionsThere are substantial healthcare and societal costs for glioma patients and caregivers. Associations between costs and treatable psychological symptoms indicate that possibly, adequate support could decrease costs.Trial registrationNetherlands Trial Register NTR3223.

Highlights

  • MethodsGliomas cause a high disease burden that greatly affects patients’ and their family caregivers’ lives, but are associated with a high healthcare burden [1]

  • Medication costs per four weeks were calculated based on the Defined Daily Doses (DDDs) from the 2015 GIP databank, with €6 added per case to account for pharmacy prescription costs and a further 6% for taxes

  • We found that on average 3 years after diagnosis, healthcare utilization, medication use, and productivity loss resulted in yearly costs of M = €20,857.53 in glioma patients at high risk for depression; with an additional yearly cost of M = €5581.49 in family caregivers

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Summary

Introduction

MethodsGliomas cause a high disease burden that greatly affects patients’ and their family caregivers’ lives, but are associated with a high healthcare burden [1]. Individual indirect costs are higher compared to other brain disorders [3], and a small US study revealed substantial out-of-pocket costs among high-grade glioma patients (N = 43; median $1341 per month) [4]. These studies do not yet take into account social care and support costs often absorbed by family caregivers. Depressive symptoms, fatigue, and cognitive deficits are common symptoms in glioma patients and may impact on patients’ and family caregivers’ quality of life [6,7,8] These symptoms may impact on direct and indirect costs.

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