Health Care Costs Associated with Chronic Kidney Disease in Patients with Type II Diabetes
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Transcript of Health Care Costs Associated with Chronic Kidney Disease in Patients with Type II Diabetes
Health Care Costs Associated with Chronic Kidney Disease in Patients with Type II Diabetes
Zita Shiue, MDInternal Medicine, R3
Chief of Medicine ConferenceOctober 25, 2011
Outline
• Background• Methods• Results• Conclusion• Future Directions
Background
• In 2009, it was estimated that the United States had $2.5 trillion in health care expenditures
• These numbers are projected to continue rising over the next several years
• Understanding health care costs is an integral part of our job as physicians
Background
• Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a growing epidemic, estimated to affect nearly 12% of the country’s population and projected to rise
• CKD is known to be associated with increased mortality and cardiovascular risk, even at early stages of disease
Background
Background
• Patients with CKD are known to utilize health care at high rates and incur more costs (Smith)- Up to 1.9 times more outpatient visits- Up to 4.1 times more use of diabetes medications- Up to 4.2 more inpatient stays - Patients with CKD double the costs of age-
matched controls
Background• Diabetes is the primary cause of end stage renal disease
(ESRD) in the U.S. and is shown to be one of the strongest cost modifiers in patients with CKD
• In 2007, the number of people diagnosed with diabetes was at least 17.5 million
• Costs associated with diabetes were estimated at $174 billion by the American Diabetes Association– $116 billion in expenditures– $58 billion in lost productivity– Utilized health care 2.3 more times when compared to patients
without diabetes
Background
• After cardiovascular disease, CKD is the second most costly complication of diabetes
• Patients with CKD and diabetes cost 1.7 times as much as either alone
• Patients with diabetes are 12 times more likely to progress to ESRD
• Once patients are end stage, costs dramatically increase due to dialysis and transplantation
Background• Despite the large economic burden created by both
diabetes and CKD, there is very little know about the costs at the earlier stages of CKD in patients with diabetes– National Kidney Foundation (NKF) revealed 5 part staging
system in 2002– Most studies have focused on CKD stage 3 and above– Previous studies show that even patients with mild stages of
CKD can have increased CVD risk
• Objective: to evaluate and stratify costs of care at all stages of CKD in a primary care population with Type 2 diabetes
Methods
Methods
• Participants for the study were recruited as part of the Pathways Epidemiology Study– A prospective population-based cohort sampled
from the Group Health diabetes registry• Group Health is a non-profit health maintenance
organization in Western Washington State• 9 of the 30 primary care clinics were selected to
be a part of this study for their large population with diabetes and increased diversity
Methods
• To qualify for the diabetes registry, patients had to fulfill one of the following:– Filled a prescription for insulin or oral
hypoglycemic– Two fasting glucose ≥ 126 mg/dl in one year– Two random glucose levels ≥ 200 in one year– Two outpatient diagnoses of diabetes– Any inpatient diagnosis of diabetes
Methods
• Surveys were mailed to 9064 patients from the diabetes registry– The survey included questions regarding
demographics, characteristics of their diabetes, comorbidities, depression
• Exclusion criteria included: type 1 diabetes, lack of laboratory information regarding kidney function
Methods• Primary predictor
– Stage of CKD as defined by the National Kidney Foundation• stage 1 = eGFR >90mL/min per 1.73m2 with evidence of proteinuria• stage 2 = eGFR 60-89 mL/min per 1.73m2 with evidence of proteinuria• stage 3 = eGFR 30-59 mL/min per 1.73m2
• stage 4 = eGFR 15-29 mL/min per 1.73m2
• stage 5 = eGFR <15 mL/min per 1.73m2 or on kidney replacement therapy such as dialysis or transplant.
– eGFR calculated using MDRD
• Covariates– age, gender, sex, hypertension, LDL, diabetic complications,
education, smoking, body mass index
Methods• Costs were evaluated at 6 months
– GH assigns budge based costs to every unit of health service rendered
• Primary Cost Outcomes– Primary and specialty outpatient– Laboratory– Imaging– Emergency– Inpatient– Total Costs– Diabetes related costs - including pharmacy costs (insulin, oral
hypoglycemic agents), and laboratory tests (glucose, albumin, hemoglobin A1C (HbA1C)).
Methods
• Statistical Methods– Descriptive statistics– T-tests for comparisons– Cuzick non-parametric tests for trends– Proportions of costs calculated using individual
proportions rather than aggregate proportions
Results
Results
• 4,938 of 9,064 surveys were returned for a 62% response rate
• 3,754 people met inclusion criteria
• Compared to patients in earlier stages of CKD, patients in later stages:– Were older– Had increased number of complications– Less college education– Greater number of people with hypertension
Stage 0N=498
Stage 1N= 208
Stage 2N = 1927
Stage 3N = 1094
Stage 4N= 129
Stage 5N=112
Age, mean (sd)* 52.4 (12.3) 52.4 (11.5) 63.1 (12.1) 71.3 (10.3) 70.8 (11.3) 63.7 (14.1)
Sex, M, n (%) 239 (48.0) 92 (44.2) 1079 (56.0) 531 (48.5) 56 (43.4) 63 (56.3)
Race, n (%)
-Caucasian* 341 (69.3) 131 (67.5) 1524 (81.32) 906 (84.8) 101 (80.1) 86 (77.5)
-African Am* 68 (13.8) 32 (16.3) 128 (6.8) 67 (6.3) 12 (9.5) 13 (11.7)
-Asian 43 (8.7) 15 (7.7) 148 (7.9) 59 (5.5) 11 (8.7) 8 (7.2)
-Other 40 (8.1) 18 (9.2) 74 (4.0) 37 (3.5) 2 (1.6) 4 (3.6)
Educ, n (%)* 419 (84.3) 161 (79.7) 1489 (78.4) 741 (69.3) 83 (64.8) 71 (64.0)
HbA1c, mean (sd) 7.8 (1.6) 8.6 (1.9) 7.8 (1.5) 7.7 (1.4) 7.8 (1.5) 7.5 (1.6)
Compl n (sd)* 0.5 (0.8) 1.7 (0.9) 1.1 (1.1) 1.9 (1.4) 3.2 (1.1) 3.1 (1.5)
LDL, mean (sd)* 115.0(32.6) 115.3 (36.9) 111.6 (34.6) 109.1(35.2) 102.5(33.9) 95.8 (30.1)
HTN, n (%)* 113 (24.0) 55 (28.2) 750 (41.0) 596 (58.1) 89 (72.4) 78 (72.5)
BMI, mean (sd)* 32.2 (8.2) 33.9 (8.1) 31.1 (7.2) 30.0 (6.5) 31.1 (7.3) 29.0 (6.9)
Smoking, n (%)* 62 (12.5) 42 (20.2) 157 (8.2) 52 (4.8) 5 (3.9) 9 (8.0)
Results
• Absolute mean total costs of care increased with worsening stage of CKD
• Costs at each stage of CKD were significantly increased when compared to stage 0
• Increased age was also associated with increased costs
• African Americans and females were associated with decreased costs
Total and Component Costs
Outpatient Costs
Stage 0 Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4 Stage 50
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
3000
Components of Outpatient Costs by Stage
-Primary care-SubspecialtyLabs/ImagingPharmacy
Mea
n Co
sts i
n US
Dol
lars
Proportional Costs
• The proportion of outpatient costs decreased with increasing stage
• The proportion of inpatient costs increased with increasing stage
Proportional Costs
Inpatient Costs
• Inpatient costs were rare and few people contributed to the mean costs
• Mean total costs were recalculated using those that actually incurred costs > 0,– Means were not significantly different by stage
• However, the number of people contributing did increase with stage
Inpatient Costs
stage 0 stage 1 stage 2 stage 3 stage 4 stage 50
2000
4000
6000
8000
10000
12000
4499.96
11026.41
6443.947 6448.008
5976.325
8722.118
Inpatient Costs
stage 0 stage 1 stage 2 stage 3 stage 4 stage 50.00
5.00
10.00
15.00
20.00
25.00
30.00
35.00
40.00
4.42
13.94 11.88
19.29
35.66
31.25
Perc
enta
ge
Diabetes Related Care
• Absolute costs related to diabetes care increased with stage
• However, the proportion of total costs attributed to diabetes care decreased with stage
Diabetes specific
432.71 (1322.08)
609.42 (1274.87)
656.18 (2335.42)
886.60 (3001.44)
1094.56 (2118.83)
2084.70 (4381.60)
Mean costs ($), (sd)
Stage 0 Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4 Stage 5
Diabetes Related Care
Conclusion
Conclusions
• Worsening stage of CKD is associated with significantly increased absolute costs across all cost categories in this Type 2 diabetes population– These results are consistent with previous studies
demonstrating increased costs and health care utilization in patient with CKD
– This study includes earlier stages of disease and reveals significant increases compared to stage 0
• Even “mild” stages of CKD can increase the total cost to the health care system
Conclusions• The proportion of inpatient costs increase with stage while
the proportion attributed to outpatient costs decreased– Similar to existing studies demonstrating increased hospitalizations
in this group– This is due to the increased number of people contributing to
inpatient costs at higher stages
• Absolute costs related to diabetes care increased but the proportion decreased with worsening stage of CKD– This may represent increased utilization of health care on non-
direct diabetes care including cardiovascular disease, anemia, ESRD
Discussion
• In this study, stage 3 CKD was the stage at which the proportions of inpatient, outpatient, and diabetes care changed significantly when compared to stage 0
• We often categorize people as chronic kidney disease once they have reached stage 3
• However, it may be that prevention of progression to this stage is most important
Discussion• As the burden of CKD rises, more research has been
devoted to methods of cost control– Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors– Better control of hypertension– Early referral to nephrology– Referral of patients to specialist care group– Early screening– Control of anemia
• Most of these studies do not involve patients with eGFR >60
Limitations
• Short follow up time of 6 months• eGFR using MDRD at one point in time• Costs are CKD plus comorbidities, not isolated• Stage 5 analysis included those on dialysis,
likely skewing data
Future Directions
• Would ideally calculate annual costs as well as 5 and 10 years
• Re-evaluate data using CKD – EPI equation, a better predictor for earlier stages of CKD– Females, African Americans, younger age
• More cost effectiveness studies, cost saving strategies, even at lower stages of disease
Summary
• Worsening stage of CKD in patients with diabetes is associated with significantly increased health care costs, even at 6 months
• This is true even at the earliest stages of disease• It is a reflection of increasing comorbidities and
health care utilization, especially of inpatient services
• Efforts should continue to be focused on primary preventive measures to lower late stage costs
References
Thank You
• Bessie A. Young, MD• Courtney Rees Lyles, PhD• Group Health Cooperative