Economic Burden of Influenza Hospitalization in High-Risk Patient Groups in the US
Author(s)
Shah S1, Schultz TR2, Kremer W2, Magyarics Z2, Jhaveri S2
1Shefali Shah Consulting LLC, Princeton , NJ, USA, 2Leyden Labs, Leiden, Netherlands
Presentation Documents
OBJECTIVES:
Costs associated with influenza-related hospitalizations in the US were evaluated to understand the unmet medical need, overall cost burden, and cost differences by patient risk groups.METHODS:
IQVIA clinical database management (CDM) and longitudinal prescription claims (LRx) datasets covering ~20M influenza-related claims over 5 years (2015-2019) in the US were acquired. Applying artificial intelligence, datasets were analysed using predictive risk modelling and cost of care analysis.RESULTS:
Annual costs of influenza-related hospitalizations in the US were estimated at ~ $8B. The average length of stay for influenza-related admissions was 4.5 days, with 20% of patients staying longer than a week. Sixteen percent of hospitalized patients were admitted to ICU. Age was the strongest single risk factor: > 75% of hospitalizations and ICU admissions occurred in adults aged ≥ 45 years. Patients aged ≥ 65 years accounted for ~$4B, or 50% of annual costs (average $27k per admission). Patients aged 45-64 years with a medical history of lower respiratory disease, heart disease, chronic kidney disease, or sepsis and immune orders accounted for ~ $1.3B of annual costs (average $36k per admission). Per admission costs were highest for patients presenting with myocarditis (average $ 315.2K per admission) but accounted for only 0.2% (~ $14M) of total costs. Antivirals were prescribed (2017-2019) to 43% of patients: 24% received antivirals prior to hospital presentation, and 21% at the hospital (3% both times). Overall, 13.5% of influenza out-patients and 75% of in-patients received antivirals at some point in their patients’ journey.CONCLUSIONS:
Despite access to seasonal influenza vaccines and 43% antiviral use, total influenza-related hospitalizations costs in the US remain high. Preventing hospitalization by 30-50% among key risk groups, especially adults aged ≥ 65 years, can reduce annual costs by 20-33%. This suggests there is still a need and market for new, more effective antivirals.Conference/Value in Health Info
2023-05, ISPOR 2023, Boston, MA, USA
Value in Health, Volume 26, Issue 6, S2 (June 2023)
Code
EE241
Topic
Clinical Outcomes, Economic Evaluation
Topic Subcategory
Clinical Outcomes Assessment
Disease
No Additional Disease & Conditions/Specialized Treatment Areas