Current medical research and opinion
-
Objective: To evaluate the impact of using different readmissions definitions among patients undergoing open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF) of the femur, tibia, and fibula in claims databases. Methods: Patients from the IBM MarketScan Research Commercial and Medicare Databases receiving inpatient ORIF between 1 January 2010 and 31 January 2017 (index) were identified. Readmissions within 90 days were calculated starting from the index day of discharge to 2 days after discharge. ⋯ Corrected readmission rates calculated 1 and 2 days after index discharge were 7.2 and 7.2%, respectively. The most common diagnosis associated with same day readmission was rehabilitation, whereas that was not observed with readmissions 1 and 2 days after discharge. Conclusions: The accuracy of identifying true admissions was improved by defining readmissions as occurring after the day of discharge and by accounting for rehabilitation, aftercare, and transfer.
-
Objective: Determine healthcare resource utilization (HCRU) and costs associated with fatigue and stiffness among patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Methods: A retrospective claims analysis compared RA patients with fatigue or stiffness to matched RA control patients with neither. Claims from a large US commercial insurance database identified new cases of stiffness/fatigue among newly diagnosed patients. ⋯ Greater HCRU yielded significantly greater (all p < .001) per-patient-per-year hospitalization costs vs. matched controls: fatigue ($2554 vs. $1293); stiffness ($2792 vs. $892); fatigue and stiffness ($3322 vs. $1033). Per-patient-per-year costs of office visits increased significantly (all p < .001) vs. matched controls: fatigue ($1373 vs. $908); stiffness ($1580 vs. $761); fatigue and stiffness ($1989 vs. $921). Conclusions: RA patients with fatigue and/or stiffness report more HCRU and incur significantly higher medical costs than RA patients without them.
-
Objectives: The aim of this study was to conduct a discrete choice experiment with patients affected by colorectal cancer to understand their preferences for different attributes of the chemotherapy supply. Our overall goal is to provide evidence on the relative importance of each attribute in order to tailor chemotherapy supply according to patients' priorities in the design or reorganization processes of cancer services. Methods: Focus groups were used to identify the attributes and levels for the discrete choice experiment. ⋯ Except for one attribute (waiting time for therapy), all other characteristics significantly influenced respondents' preferences. Conclusions: Results should support a policy of strengthening medical doctors' capabilities to communicate with patients, providing them complete information and involving them in the clinical decisions. Specifically, the findings should be used to improve the current provision of cancer care by identifying areas of preferred intervention from the perspectives of patients in order to tailor the service supply accordingly.
-
Objective: An extended half-life factor IX (FIX) fusion protein linking recombinant FIX with recombinant human albumin (rIX-FP), indicated for the treatment of hemophilia B, was approved by the European Medicines Agency in May 2016. We aimed to compare clinical outcomes and drug utilization in patients who switched from prior FIX therapies to rIX-FP. Methods: Anonymized patient chart data were collected from German institutions treating patients with hemophilia B. ⋯ Among the patients for whom bleed data were available (n = 42), annualized bleeding rate decreased from a mean (standard deviation) of 2.6 ± 2.9 on prior product to 0.3 ± 0.6 on rIX-FP. The proportion of patients with zero bleeds increased from 24% with prior therapy to 81% with rIX-FP. Conclusion: rIX-FP was associated with substantial reductions in bleeding rates and consumption of FIX compared with standard half-life products that require more frequent administration.