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Medical and Non-medical Costs of Sickle Cell Disease and Treatments from a US Perspective: A Systematic Review and Landscape Analysis

Journal

PHARMACOECONOMICS-OPEN
Volume 6, Issue 4, Pages 469-481

Publisher

SPRINGER INT PUBL AG
DOI: 10.1007/s41669-022-00330-w

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) Agreement OTA [OT3HL152448, OT3HL151434]

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This study systematically summarizes the medical and non-medical costs of sickle cell disease (SCD). The results show that SCD patients have higher costs compared to non-SCD individuals, with inpatient costs being the highest component. However, there is an incomplete characterization of the cost burden within SCD, and further research is needed to capture the lifetime burden and the impact of existing health technologies on the disease trajectory.
Background Sickle cell disease (SCD) is a complex genetic disorder that manifests in infancy and progresses throughout life in the form of acute and chronic complications. As the upfront costs of potentially curative, genetic therapies will likely be high, an assessment and comprehensive characterization of the medical and non-medical cost burden will inform future decision making. Objective We sought to systematically summarize the existing literature surrounding SCD medical and non-medical costs. Methods We searched MEDLINE and EMBASE (2008-2020) and identified US-based studies that detailed medical or non-medical costs. Eligible studies provided empirical estimates about any aspect of cost or SCD individuals of all ages and their caregivers. Study quality was assessed using the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale, and costs were adjusted to 2019 USS. Results Search queries returned 479 studies, with 342 from medical burden searches and 137 from non-medical burden searches, respectively. Herein, we report the results of the 40 studies that contained relevant cost information: 39 detailed medical costs and 1 detailed non-medical costs. Costs were higher for SCD patients when compared with non-SCD individuals (cost difference range: $6636-$63,436 annually). The highest medical cost component for SCD patients was inpatient ($11,978-$59,851 annually), followed by outpatient and then pharmacy. No studies characterized the cost burden throughout the lifetime disease trajectory of an SCD individual, and no studies captured caregiver or productivity costs. Conclusion Our results reveal an incomplete characterization of medical and non-medical costs within SCD. A deeper understanding of the medical and non-medical cost burden requires completion of additional studies that capture the burden across the patient's lifetime, in addition to expression of the impact of existing and emergent health technologies on disease trajectory.

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