Cost‐of‐Illness Analysis of Long‐Term Health Care Resource Use and Disease Burden in Patients With Pulmonary Embolism: Insights From the PREFER in VTE Registry

Author:

Farmakis Ioannis T.1ORCID,Barco Stefano12ORCID,Mavromanoli Anna C.1ORCID,Agnelli Giancarlo3ORCID,Cohen Alexander T.4ORCID,Giannakoulas George5ORCID,Mahan Charles E.6ORCID,Konstantinides Stavros V.17ORCID,Valerio Luca18ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Center for Thrombosis and Hemostasis University Medical Center of the Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz Germany

2. Department of Angiology University Hospital Zurich Zurich Switzerland

3. Internal Vascular and Emergency Medicine‐Stroke Unit University of Perugia Perugia Italy

4. Department of Haematology, Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust King’s College London London UK

5. Department of Cardiology, AHEPA University Hospital Aristotle University of Thessaloniki Thessaloniki Greece

6. University of New Mexico College of Pharmacy Albuquerque NM

7. Department of Cardiology Democritus University of Thrace Alexandroupolis Greece

8. Department of Cardiology University Medical Center of the Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz Germany

Abstract

Background As mortality from pulmonary embolism (PE) decreases, the personal and societal costs among survivors are receiving increasing attention. Detailing this burden would support an efficient public health resource allocation. We aimed to provide estimates for the economic and disease burden of PE also accounting for long‐term health care use and both direct and indirect costs beyond the acute phase. Methods and Results This is a cost‐of‐illness analysis with a bottom‐up approach based on data from the PREFER in VTE registry (Prevention of Thromboembolic Events—European Registry in Venous Thromboembolism). We calculated direct (clinical events and anticoagulation) and indirect costs (loss of productivity) of an acute PE event and its 12‐month follow‐up in 2020 Euros. We estimated a disability weight for the 12‐month post‐PE status and corresponding disability adjusted life years presumably owing to PE. Disease‐specific costs in the first year of follow‐up after an incident PE case ranged between 9135 Euros and 10 620 Euros. The proportion of indirect costs was 42% to 49% of total costs. Costs were lowest in patients with ongoing cancer, mainly because productivity loss was less evident in this already burdened population. The calculated disability weight for survivors who were cancer free 12 months post‐PE was 0.017, and the estimated disability adjusted life years per incident case were 1.17. Conclusions The economic burden imposed by PE to society and affected patients is considerable, and productivity loss is its main driver. The disease burden from PE is remarkable and translates to the loss of roughly 1.2 years of healthy life per incident PE case.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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