Economic Burden of Medically Attended Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infections Among Privately Insured Children Under 5 Years of Age in the USA

Author:

Tran Phuong T.12ORCID,Nduaguba Sabina O.134,Wang Yanning156,Diaby Vakaramoko157,Finelli Lynn8,Choi Yoonyoung8ORCID,Winterstein Almut G.159ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pharmaceutical Outcomes and Policy, College of Pharmacy University of Florida Gainesville Florida USA

2. Faculty of Pharmacy HUTECH University Ho Chi Minh City Vietnam

3. Department of Pharmaceutical Systems and Policy School of Pharmacy Morgantown West Virginia USA

4. West Virginia University Cancer Institute West Virginia University Morgantown West Virginia USA

5. Center for Drug Evaluation and Safety University of Florida Gainesville Florida USA

6. Department of Health Outcomes and Biomedical Informatics, College of Medicine University of Florida Gainesville Florida USA

7. Global Value and Real‐World Evidence Otsuka America Pharmaceutical, Inc. Princeton New Jersey USA

8. Center for Observational and Real‐World Evidence Merck & Co., Inc Rahway New Jersey USA

9. Department of Epidemiology, College of Medicine and College of Public Health and Health Professions University of Florida Gainesville Florida USA

Abstract

ABSTRACTBackgroundThe cost of medically attended RSV LRI (lower respiratory infection) is critical in determining the economic value of new RSV immunoprophylaxes. However, most studies have focused on intermittent RSV encounters, not the episode of care that captures the entirety of RSV illness.MethodsWe created age‐ and condition‐specific cohorts of children under 5 years of age using MarketScan® data (2015–2019). We contrasted aggregating healthcare costs over RSV‐LRTI episodes to ascertaining costs based on RSV‐specific encounters only. Economic burden was estimated by multiplying costs per encounter or per episode by their respective incidence rates.ResultsAverage cost was higher per episode than per encounter regardless of settings (inpatient: $28,586 vs. $18,056 and outpatient/ED: $2099 vs. $407 for infants). Across ages, the economic burden was highest for infants and RSV‐LRTI requiring inpatient care, but the burden in outpatient/ED settings was disproportionately higher than costs due to higher incidence rates (for inpatient vs. outpatient episodes: $226,403 vs. $101,269; for inpatient vs. outpatient encounters: $151,878 vs. $38,819 per 1000 infant‐years). For high‐risk children, cost and burden were up to 3–10 times higher, respectively.ConclusionsWith a comprehensive stratification by settings and risk condition, the encounter‐ versus episode‐based estimates provide a robust range for policymakers' economic appraisal of new RSV immunoprophylaxes.

Funder

Merck

Publisher

Wiley

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