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Health care costs associated with hepatitis C: a longitudinal cohort study
Authors:Krajden Mel  Kuo Margot  Zagorski Brandon  Alvarez Maria  Yu Amanda  Krahn Murray
Affiliation:BC Centre for Disease Control, Vancouver, British Columbia;;2 Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario
Abstract:

BACKGROUND

Disease-specific estimates of medical costs are important for health policy decision making.

OBJECTIVE

To identify predictors of health care costs associated with hepatitis C virus (HCV) seropositivity across disease phases.

METHODS

HCV laboratory tests from the BC Centre for Disease Control were linked to administrative data pertaining to health services and drugs dispensed to estimate costs among case subjects and controls. The case group comprised HCV seropositive individuals (n=20,001), and the control group comprised single-tested, HCV seronegative persons (n=70,752) identified between January 1997 and December 2004. Subject observation time was assigned to the three following disease phases: initial phase (after diagnosis), late phase (late-stage liver disease) and predeath phase (12 months before death). Case subjects and controls were matched for age, sex and a propensity score within each phase to determine the net cost attributable to HCV seropositivity, and were adjusted for demographic and clinical factors.

RESULTS

Costs increased with disease progression, with hospitalization being the highest cost component in all phases. Initial and late phase net costs (2005 Canadian dollars) were $1,850 and $6,000 per patient per year, respectively. Costs among case subjects were driven by age, comorbidities, mental illness, illicit drug use and HIV coinfection. While predeath case subject and control costs were virtually the same, costs were high and case subjects died at a younger age.

CONCLUSION

HCV seropositivity is associated with increased medical costs driven by viral sequelae and medicosocial vulnerabilities (ie, mental illness, illicit drug use and HIV coinfection). Cost mitigation and health outcome improvements will require broad-based prevention programming to reduce vulnerabilities and HCV treatment to prevent disease progression, respectively.
Keywords:Cost of illness   Health economics   Hepatitis C   Liver disease   Net costs   Vulnerable populations
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