BACKGROUND: The cost of epilepsy is usually reported as total expenditure over a certain period. However, with the increased availability of acute treatments for use in the community setting, intermittent,… Click to show full abstract
BACKGROUND: The cost of epilepsy is usually reported as total expenditure over a certain period. However, with the increased availability of acute treatments for use in the community setting, intermittent, single-seizure treatment is now possible in addition to the chronic epilepsy drug treatment paradigm. Data on the cost of discrete health care encounters are needed to substantiate the cost-benefit of these new treatments. OBJECTIVE: To estimate the health plan-paid costs of discrete epilepsy-related health care encounters in patients with epilepsy. METHODS: This retrospective cohort study utilized IBM MarketScan Commercial Claims, Medicare Supplemental and Coordination of Benefits (Medicare patients with supplemental insurance), and Multi-State Medicaid research databases. The primary analysis determined health plan-paid cost (adjudicated claims) of discrete epilepsy-related health care encounters, defined as having a primary diagnosis code of epilepsy or convulsion, from 2013 to 2018, in patients with epilepsy aged ≥ 12 years. Costs were adjusted to 2018 prices. Epilepsy cases were defined using ICD-CM codes. We excluded patients on capitated insurance plans as their cost per health care encounter is unknown. RESULTS: In total, 353,530 commercially insured, 378,051 Medicaid, and 69,176 Medicare plus supplemental insurance patients with epilepsy were included. More than 160,000 epilepsy-related emergency transportations, 225,000 emergency department (ED) visits, 49,000 hospitalizations, 700 urgent care visits, and ~2.5 million office visits were analyzed. 37.4% of epilepsy-related hospitalizations included care in the intensive care unit (ICU). In commercially insured patients, epilepsy-related health care encounters had median health plan-paid costs of $22,305 (Q1-Q3 = $14,336-$36,096, hospitalization); $3,375 ($565-$9,095, ICU visit); $1,913 ($417-$4,163, ED visit); $687 ($415-$1,083, emergency transportation); $95 ($23-$232, office visit); and $57 ($0-$171, urgent care visit). The median length of stay for epilepsy-related hospitalizations in working age, commercially insured patients was 4 (Q1-Q3 = 2-5) days. CONCLUSIONS: This is the first study to report health plan-paid cost per epilepsy-related health care encounter. These data can serve as a basis for more granular cost-benefit analyses of not only chronic but also acute treatments of epilepsy. DISCLOSURES: This analysis was funded by UCB Pharma. The sponsor had a role in the identification, design, conduct, and reporting of the analysis. Borghs, Beaty, Boudiaf, and Loewendorf are employees of UCB Pharma. Kalilani and Parekh were employees of UCB Pharma at the time of the analysis. Borghs, Beaty, and Loewendorf have received UCB Pharma stock from their employment. Kalilani and Parekh had received UCB Pharma stock at the time of employment, but no longer hold any. This work was presented in part as a poster at the 73rd Annual Meeting of the American Epilepsy Society; December 7, 2019; Baltimore, MD.
               
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