4.5 Article

Long-term direct and indirect economic burden associated with osteoporotic fracture in US postmenopausal women

Journal

OSTEOPOROSIS INTERNATIONAL
Volume 32, Issue 6, Pages 1195-1205

Publisher

SPRINGER LONDON LTD
DOI: 10.1007/s00198-020-05769-3

Keywords

Absenteeism; Fractures; Long-term cost of fracture; Osteoporosis; Short-term disability

Funding

  1. Amgen Inc.

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This study found that patients with osteoporotic fractures incurred higher healthcare costs in the first five years post-fracture, emphasizing the importance of early identification of high-risk patients and ongoing management for osteoporosis.
The study examined long-term direct and indirect economic burden of osteoporotic fractures among postmenopausal women. Healthcare costs among fracture patients were substantial in first year after fracture and remained higher than fracture-free controls for 5 years which highlight needs for early detection of high-risk patients and continued management for osteoporosis. Introduction This study compared direct and indirect healthcare costs between postmenopausal women and demographically matched controls in the 5 years after incident non-traumatic fracture, and by fracture type in commercially insured and Medicare populations. Methods Two hundred twenty-six thousand one hundred ninety women (91,925 aged 50-64 years; 134,265 aged >= 65 years) with incident non-traumatic fracture (hip, vertebral, and non-hip non-vertebral (NHNV)) from 2008 to 2017 were identified. Patients with fracture were directly matched (1:1) to non-fracture controls based on demographic characteristics. Direct healthcare costs were assessed using general linear models, adjusting for baseline costs, comorbidities, osteoporosis diagnosis, and treatment. Indirect costs associated with work loss due to absenteeism and short-term disability (STD) were assessed among commercially insured patients. Costs were standardized to 2019 US dollars. Results Osteoporosis diagnosis and treatment rates prior to fracture were low. Patients with fracture incurred higher direct costs across 5-year post-index compared with non-fracture controls, regardless of fracture type or insurance. For commercially insured hip fracture patients, the mean adjusted incremental direct healthcare costs in years 1, 3, and 5 were $59,327, $6885, and $3241, respectively. Incremental costs were lower, but trends were similar for vertebral and NHNV fracture types and Medicare-insured patients. Commercially insured patients with fracture had higher unadjusted indirect costs due to absenteeism and STD in year 1 and higher adjusted indirect costs due to STD at year 1 (incremental cost $5848, $2748, and $2596 for hip, vertebral, and NHNV fracture). Conclusions A considerable and sustained economic burden after a non-traumatic fracture underscores the need for early patient identification and continued management.

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