Abstract
Biologic-era data regarding the direct cost and healthcare utilization of inflammatory bowel disease at the population level are limited, especially in Asia. Thus, we aimed to investigate the nationwide prevalence, direct cost, and healthcare utilization of inflammatory bowel disease in Korea in a recent 10-year period. Using the Korean National Health Insurance claim data from 2008 to 2017, we investigated all prescription medications and their associated direct costs, hospitalizations, and outpatient visits. We also estimated the nationwide prevalence of inflammatory bowel disease using population census data. The estimated inflammatory bowel disease prevalence significantly increased from 108.8/100 000 in 2008 to 140.4/100 000 in 2017. The overall annual costs for inflammatory bowel disease and the healthcare cost per capita increased from $24.5 million (in US dollars) to $105.1 million and from $458.4 to $1456.6 million, respectively (both P<0.001). Whereas the ratio of outpatient costs increased from 35.3% to 69.4%, that of outpatient days remained steady. The total annual medication cost and proportion rose from $13.3 million to $76.8 million and from 54.2% to 73.3%, respectively, mainly due to the increasing antitumor necrosis factor cost, from $1.5 million to $49.3 million (from 11.1% to 64.1% of the total annual drug cost and from 6.3% to 46.9% of the total annual cost). We observed increasing trends in the prevalence, direct costs, and healthcare utilization of inflammatory bowel disease in Korea in recent years. The attributable cost was mainly driven by rising expenditures on antitumor necrosis factor medications.
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