4.1 Article

Healthcare utilization and cost burden of Huntington's disease among Medicare beneficiaries in the United States

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEDICAL ECONOMICS
Volume 24, Issue 1, Pages 1327-1336

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/13696998.2021.2002579

Keywords

Huntington's disease; Medicare; administrative claims; healthcare utilization and cost burden

Funding

  1. Genentech, Inc. - F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd.

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This study examined healthcare utilization and costs in a US Medicare population diagnosed with Huntington's disease. The findings showed that individuals with HD have significantly higher healthcare needs and associated costs compared to those without HD.
Aims To examine healthcare utilization and costs in a US Medicare population diagnosed with Huntington's disease (HD). Methods This was a retrospective matched cohort study using Medicare fee-for-service (FFS) claims data using 2013-2017 Research Identifiable Files. Medicare beneficiaries diagnosed with HD based on the presence of at least one medical claim with an International Classification of Diseases, Ninth or Tenth Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-9/10-CM) diagnosis code for HD (ICD-9-CM: 333.4; ICD-10-CM: G10) during the identification period (2014-2016). Beneficiaries without HD were drawn from a 5% random sample of Medicare beneficiaries and 1:1 matched to those with HD for comparison. All-cause and HD-related (any utilization related to HD diagnosis or symptoms associated with HD) healthcare utilization and costs were reported. Results We identified 3,688 matched pairs of beneficiaries with and without HD. Of those with HD, 1,922 (52.1%) were late-stage, 916 (24.8%) were middle-stage, and 850 (23.1%) were early-stage. Mean [SD] annual total healthcare costs were higher for HD beneficiaries than beneficiaries without HD ($41,631 [57,393] vs. $17,222 [31,218], p < .001) and were primarily driven by outpatient pharmacy costs ($19,182 [45,469] vs. $4,318 [11,553], p < .001). In the stratified analysis, total healthcare costs were highest among beneficiaries with late-stage HD (mean [SD] cost: $20,475 [$41,122] for early-stage vs. $29,733 [$44,977] for middle-stage vs. $56,657 [$64,185] for late-stage; p < .001). Limitations Results are not generalizable to beneficiaries enrolled in other non-FFS Medicare plans. Administrative claims are intended for billing purposes, not research, and may not capture all symptoms, comorbidities, and other adverse events. Conclusions This original, comprehensive analysis of healthcare utilization and economic burden among Medicare beneficiaries with HD found that healthcare needs and associated costs are substantially higher among Medicare beneficiaries who are diagnosed with HD compared to beneficiaries without HD.

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