Abstract

BackgroundCholangiocarcinoma (CCA) is associated with poor prognosis. Healthcare-related management likely presents a substantial economic burden associated with time away from work in patients with CCA.ObjectivesTo assess productivity loss, associated indirect costs, and all-cause healthcare resource utilization and costs owing to workplace absenteeism, short-term disability, and long-term disability in CCA patients with work absence and disability benefits eligibility in the United States.MethodsUS retrospective claims data from Merative MarketScan Commercial and Health and Productivity Management Databases. Eligible patients were adults with ≥1 non-diagnostic medical claim for CCA in the index period (1 January 2011–31 December 2019) and had ≥6 months of continuous medical and pharmacy benefit enrolment before and ≥1 month of follow-up and full-time employee work absence and disability benefits eligibility after the index date. Outcomes were assessed in patients with CCA, intrahepatic CCA (iCCA), and extrahepatic CCA (eCCA) in absenteeism, short-term disability, and long-term disability cohorts (measured per patient per month [PPPM] for a month of 21 workdays), with costs standardized to 2019 USD.ResultsOne thousand and sixty-five patients with CCA were included (iCCA: n = 624 [58.6%]; eCCA: n = 380 [35.7%]). The mean age was 51.9–53.9 years across cohorts. In patients with iCCA and eCCA, respectively, the number of mean all-cause days absent PPPM for illness was 6.0 and 4.3, and 12.9 and 6.6% had ≥1 CCA-related short-term disability claim. Median indirect costs PPPM owing to absenteeism, short-term disability, and long-term disability, respectively, in patients with iCCA were $622, $635, and $690, and $304, $589, and $465 in patients with eCCA. Patients with iCCA vs. eCCA had higher inpatient, outpatient medical, outpatient pharmacy, and all-cause healthcare costs PPPM.ConclusionsPatients with CCA had high productivity losses, indirect costs, and medical costs. Outpatient services costs contributed greatly to the higher healthcare expenditure observed in patients with iCCA vs. eCCA.

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