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Neutropenia-Related Costs in Patients Treated with First-Line Chemotherapy for Advanced Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer

BACKGROUND: Neutropenia is a major adverse event often associated with chemotherapy administration. Neutropenia-related complications often lead to increased use of costly health care including inpatient and outpatient services. Monitoring and treatment of neutropenia thus place an economic burden o...

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Autores principales: Stokes, Michael E., Muehlenbein, Catherine E., Marciniak, Martin D., Faries, Douglas E., Motabar, Saeed, Gillespie, Theresa W., Lipscomb, Joseph, Knopf, Kevin B., Buesching, Don P.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Academy of Managed Care Pharmacy 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10441202/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19803556
http://dx.doi.org/10.18553/jmcp.2009.15.8.669
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author Stokes, Michael E.
Muehlenbein, Catherine E.
Marciniak, Martin D.
Faries, Douglas E.
Motabar, Saeed
Gillespie, Theresa W.
Lipscomb, Joseph
Knopf, Kevin B.
Buesching, Don P.
author_facet Stokes, Michael E.
Muehlenbein, Catherine E.
Marciniak, Martin D.
Faries, Douglas E.
Motabar, Saeed
Gillespie, Theresa W.
Lipscomb, Joseph
Knopf, Kevin B.
Buesching, Don P.
author_sort Stokes, Michael E.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Neutropenia is a major adverse event often associated with chemotherapy administration. Neutropenia-related complications often lead to increased use of costly health care including inpatient and outpatient services. Monitoring and treatment of neutropenia thus place an economic burden on the health care system. OBJECTIVES: To evaluate (a) costs and medical resource use for chemotherapy-related afebrile and febrile neutropenia in an elderly population with Stage IIIB or Stage IV non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), and (b) costs unrelated to neutropenia and total all-cause health care costs during first-line chemotherapy. METHODS: Study patients in this retrospective database analysis were aged 65 years or older with a diagnosis of Stage IIIB or Stage IV NSCLC in the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) cancer registry from 1998 through 2002. Neutropenia was identified by the presence of a primary or secondary diagnosis code for diseases of white blood cells (ICD-9-CM=288.xx) during a period of first-line chemotherapy treatment. Febrile neutropenia was defined by (a) an inpatient hospitalization with a primary or secondary diagnosis for neutropenia occurring at any time during first-line chemotherapy or (b) intravenous or intramuscular antibiotic administration occurring after the initial neutropenia diagnosis and during first-line chemotherapy. Patients with neutropenia without these events were considered to have afebrile neutropenia. Patients were followed in the SEER-Medicare database to evaluate costs (defined as all Medicare payments, primary insurer payments, and patient copayments and deductibles) and resource use associated with afebrile or febrile neutropenia while on first-line chemotherapy. If a patient switched to second-line chemotherapy, the day prior to the switch was defined as the end of first-line treatment. If a switch to second-line therapy did not occur, then first-line therapy was assumed to end 30 days following administration of the last first-line agent. Costs were summed for 2 main types of cost measures: neutropenia-related costs, defined as costs for claims with either a primary or secondary diagnosis of neutropenia, and costs unrelated to neutropenia. Costs were classified using ICD-9-CM diagnosis and procedure codes appearing on the claims, with confidence intervals [CIs] for cost measures estimated by using nonparametric bootstrapping methods. Group comparisons of patient characteristics, medical utilization, and cost study measures were made using 2-sided Pearson chi-square and t-test statistics for categorical and continuous measures, respectively. The no neutropenia group was used as the reference category for comparisons involving patient characteristic, medical utilization, and total all-cause health care cost study measures. For total neutropenia-related costs, afebrile and febrile neutropenia study groups were compared. RESULTS: Among elderly patients treated first-line for advanced NSCLC, 5,138 met inclusion criteria, of whom 1,228 (23.9%) developed afebrile (n=740, 14.4%) or febrile neutropenia (n = 488, 9.5%) while on first-line chemotherapy. Mean per patient costs for treating neutropenia during first-line chemotherapy were $12,148 (standard deviation [SD]=$15,432, 95% confidence interval [CI]=$10,915-$13,607) for patients with febrile neutropenia and $3,099 (SD=$4,541, 95% CI=$2,796-$3,431) for patients with afebrile neutropenia (P less than 0.001), with mean (SD) length of follow-up (duration of first-line chemotherapy) of 4.5 (4.8) and 5.5 (7.0) months, respectively. Expressed as a percentage of total all-cause health care costs during first-line chemotherapy, neutropenia-related costs accounted for 32.2% of total costs for patients with febrile neutropenia (mean [SD]=$37,694 [$26,078]) and 9.1% of total costs for patients with afebrile neutropenia (mean [SD]=$34,204 [$26,317]). Mean
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spelling pubmed-104412022023-08-22 Neutropenia-Related Costs in Patients Treated with First-Line Chemotherapy for Advanced Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer Stokes, Michael E. Muehlenbein, Catherine E. Marciniak, Martin D. Faries, Douglas E. Motabar, Saeed Gillespie, Theresa W. Lipscomb, Joseph Knopf, Kevin B. Buesching, Don P. J Manag Care Pharm Research BACKGROUND: Neutropenia is a major adverse event often associated with chemotherapy administration. Neutropenia-related complications often lead to increased use of costly health care including inpatient and outpatient services. Monitoring and treatment of neutropenia thus place an economic burden on the health care system. OBJECTIVES: To evaluate (a) costs and medical resource use for chemotherapy-related afebrile and febrile neutropenia in an elderly population with Stage IIIB or Stage IV non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), and (b) costs unrelated to neutropenia and total all-cause health care costs during first-line chemotherapy. METHODS: Study patients in this retrospective database analysis were aged 65 years or older with a diagnosis of Stage IIIB or Stage IV NSCLC in the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) cancer registry from 1998 through 2002. Neutropenia was identified by the presence of a primary or secondary diagnosis code for diseases of white blood cells (ICD-9-CM=288.xx) during a period of first-line chemotherapy treatment. Febrile neutropenia was defined by (a) an inpatient hospitalization with a primary or secondary diagnosis for neutropenia occurring at any time during first-line chemotherapy or (b) intravenous or intramuscular antibiotic administration occurring after the initial neutropenia diagnosis and during first-line chemotherapy. Patients with neutropenia without these events were considered to have afebrile neutropenia. Patients were followed in the SEER-Medicare database to evaluate costs (defined as all Medicare payments, primary insurer payments, and patient copayments and deductibles) and resource use associated with afebrile or febrile neutropenia while on first-line chemotherapy. If a patient switched to second-line chemotherapy, the day prior to the switch was defined as the end of first-line treatment. If a switch to second-line therapy did not occur, then first-line therapy was assumed to end 30 days following administration of the last first-line agent. Costs were summed for 2 main types of cost measures: neutropenia-related costs, defined as costs for claims with either a primary or secondary diagnosis of neutropenia, and costs unrelated to neutropenia. Costs were classified using ICD-9-CM diagnosis and procedure codes appearing on the claims, with confidence intervals [CIs] for cost measures estimated by using nonparametric bootstrapping methods. Group comparisons of patient characteristics, medical utilization, and cost study measures were made using 2-sided Pearson chi-square and t-test statistics for categorical and continuous measures, respectively. The no neutropenia group was used as the reference category for comparisons involving patient characteristic, medical utilization, and total all-cause health care cost study measures. For total neutropenia-related costs, afebrile and febrile neutropenia study groups were compared. RESULTS: Among elderly patients treated first-line for advanced NSCLC, 5,138 met inclusion criteria, of whom 1,228 (23.9%) developed afebrile (n=740, 14.4%) or febrile neutropenia (n = 488, 9.5%) while on first-line chemotherapy. Mean per patient costs for treating neutropenia during first-line chemotherapy were $12,148 (standard deviation [SD]=$15,432, 95% confidence interval [CI]=$10,915-$13,607) for patients with febrile neutropenia and $3,099 (SD=$4,541, 95% CI=$2,796-$3,431) for patients with afebrile neutropenia (P less than 0.001), with mean (SD) length of follow-up (duration of first-line chemotherapy) of 4.5 (4.8) and 5.5 (7.0) months, respectively. Expressed as a percentage of total all-cause health care costs during first-line chemotherapy, neutropenia-related costs accounted for 32.2% of total costs for patients with febrile neutropenia (mean [SD]=$37,694 [$26,078]) and 9.1% of total costs for patients with afebrile neutropenia (mean [SD]=$34,204 [$26,317]). Mean Academy of Managed Care Pharmacy 2009-10 /pmc/articles/PMC10441202/ /pubmed/19803556 http://dx.doi.org/10.18553/jmcp.2009.15.8.669 Text en Copyright © 2009, Academy of Managed Care Pharmacy. All rights reserved. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits unrestricted use and redistribution provided that the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research
Stokes, Michael E.
Muehlenbein, Catherine E.
Marciniak, Martin D.
Faries, Douglas E.
Motabar, Saeed
Gillespie, Theresa W.
Lipscomb, Joseph
Knopf, Kevin B.
Buesching, Don P.
Neutropenia-Related Costs in Patients Treated with First-Line Chemotherapy for Advanced Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer
title Neutropenia-Related Costs in Patients Treated with First-Line Chemotherapy for Advanced Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer
title_full Neutropenia-Related Costs in Patients Treated with First-Line Chemotherapy for Advanced Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer
title_fullStr Neutropenia-Related Costs in Patients Treated with First-Line Chemotherapy for Advanced Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer
title_full_unstemmed Neutropenia-Related Costs in Patients Treated with First-Line Chemotherapy for Advanced Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer
title_short Neutropenia-Related Costs in Patients Treated with First-Line Chemotherapy for Advanced Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer
title_sort neutropenia-related costs in patients treated with first-line chemotherapy for advanced non-small cell lung cancer
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10441202/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19803556
http://dx.doi.org/10.18553/jmcp.2009.15.8.669
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