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Pain severity and the economic burden of neuropathic pain in the United States: BEAT Neuropathic Pain Observational Study

BACKGROUND: As with many chronic conditions, patients with neuropathic pain (NeP) are high consumers of health care resources. However, limited literature exists on the economic burden of NeP, including its impact on productivity. The aim of this study was to characterize health care resource utiliz...

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Autores principales: Schaefer, Caroline, Sadosky, Alesia, Mann, Rachael, Daniel, Shoshana, Parsons, Bruce, Tuchman, Michael, Anschel, Alan, Stacey, Brett R, Nalamachu, Srinivas, Nieshoff, Edward
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Dove Medical Press 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4218900/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25378940
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/CEOR.S63323
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author Schaefer, Caroline
Sadosky, Alesia
Mann, Rachael
Daniel, Shoshana
Parsons, Bruce
Tuchman, Michael
Anschel, Alan
Stacey, Brett R
Nalamachu, Srinivas
Nieshoff, Edward
author_facet Schaefer, Caroline
Sadosky, Alesia
Mann, Rachael
Daniel, Shoshana
Parsons, Bruce
Tuchman, Michael
Anschel, Alan
Stacey, Brett R
Nalamachu, Srinivas
Nieshoff, Edward
author_sort Schaefer, Caroline
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: As with many chronic conditions, patients with neuropathic pain (NeP) are high consumers of health care resources. However, limited literature exists on the economic burden of NeP, including its impact on productivity. The aim of this study was to characterize health care resource utilization, productivity, and costs associated with NeP by pain severity level in US adults. METHODS: Subjects (n=624) with painful diabetic peripheral neuropathy, human immunodeficiency virus-related peripheral NeP, post-trauma/post-surgical NeP, spinal cord injury with NeP, chronic low back pain with NeP, and small fiber neuropathy were recruited during routine office visits to US community-based general practitioners and specialists. Clinicians captured clinical characteristics, NeP-related medications, and health care resource utilization based on 6-month retrospective medical chart review. Subjects completed questionnaires on demographics, pain/symptoms, costs, and productivity. Brief Pain Inventory pain severity scores were used to classify subjects by mild, moderate, or severe pain. Annualized NeP-related costs (adjusted for covariates) were estimated, and differences across pain severity groups were evaluated. RESULTS: In total, 624 subjects were recruited (mean age 55.5±13.7 years; 55.4% male), and 504/624 (80.8%) reported moderate or severe pain. Statistically significant differences were observed across pain severity levels for number of comorbidities, prescription medications, physician office visits, and lost productivity (all P≤0.0001). At all pain severity levels, indirect costs were the primary cost driver. After adjusting for demographic and clinical variables, total mean (95% confidence interval [CI]) annualized direct medical costs to payers, direct costs to subjects, and indirect costs per subject were US$6,016 (95% CI 5,316–6,716), US$2,219 (95% CI 1,919–2,519), and US$19,000 (95% CI 17,197–20,802), respectively, with significant differences across pain severity levels. CONCLUSION: Subjects with NeP, mainly those showing moderate or severe pain, had significant associations between pain severity and NeP-related health care resource utilization, productivity, and costs. The economic burden, particularly indirect costs, was highest among those with severe pain and higher than previously reported in studies of specific NeP conditions.
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spelling pubmed-42189002014-11-06 Pain severity and the economic burden of neuropathic pain in the United States: BEAT Neuropathic Pain Observational Study Schaefer, Caroline Sadosky, Alesia Mann, Rachael Daniel, Shoshana Parsons, Bruce Tuchman, Michael Anschel, Alan Stacey, Brett R Nalamachu, Srinivas Nieshoff, Edward Clinicoecon Outcomes Res Original Research BACKGROUND: As with many chronic conditions, patients with neuropathic pain (NeP) are high consumers of health care resources. However, limited literature exists on the economic burden of NeP, including its impact on productivity. The aim of this study was to characterize health care resource utilization, productivity, and costs associated with NeP by pain severity level in US adults. METHODS: Subjects (n=624) with painful diabetic peripheral neuropathy, human immunodeficiency virus-related peripheral NeP, post-trauma/post-surgical NeP, spinal cord injury with NeP, chronic low back pain with NeP, and small fiber neuropathy were recruited during routine office visits to US community-based general practitioners and specialists. Clinicians captured clinical characteristics, NeP-related medications, and health care resource utilization based on 6-month retrospective medical chart review. Subjects completed questionnaires on demographics, pain/symptoms, costs, and productivity. Brief Pain Inventory pain severity scores were used to classify subjects by mild, moderate, or severe pain. Annualized NeP-related costs (adjusted for covariates) were estimated, and differences across pain severity groups were evaluated. RESULTS: In total, 624 subjects were recruited (mean age 55.5±13.7 years; 55.4% male), and 504/624 (80.8%) reported moderate or severe pain. Statistically significant differences were observed across pain severity levels for number of comorbidities, prescription medications, physician office visits, and lost productivity (all P≤0.0001). At all pain severity levels, indirect costs were the primary cost driver. After adjusting for demographic and clinical variables, total mean (95% confidence interval [CI]) annualized direct medical costs to payers, direct costs to subjects, and indirect costs per subject were US$6,016 (95% CI 5,316–6,716), US$2,219 (95% CI 1,919–2,519), and US$19,000 (95% CI 17,197–20,802), respectively, with significant differences across pain severity levels. CONCLUSION: Subjects with NeP, mainly those showing moderate or severe pain, had significant associations between pain severity and NeP-related health care resource utilization, productivity, and costs. The economic burden, particularly indirect costs, was highest among those with severe pain and higher than previously reported in studies of specific NeP conditions. Dove Medical Press 2014-10-29 /pmc/articles/PMC4218900/ /pubmed/25378940 http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/CEOR.S63323 Text en © 2014 Schaefer et al. This work is published by Dove Medical Press Limited, and licensed under Creative Commons Attribution – Non Commercial (unported, v3.0) License The full terms of the License are available at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/. Non-commercial uses of the work are permitted without any further permission from Dove Medical Press Limited, provided the work is properly attributed.
spellingShingle Original Research
Schaefer, Caroline
Sadosky, Alesia
Mann, Rachael
Daniel, Shoshana
Parsons, Bruce
Tuchman, Michael
Anschel, Alan
Stacey, Brett R
Nalamachu, Srinivas
Nieshoff, Edward
Pain severity and the economic burden of neuropathic pain in the United States: BEAT Neuropathic Pain Observational Study
title Pain severity and the economic burden of neuropathic pain in the United States: BEAT Neuropathic Pain Observational Study
title_full Pain severity and the economic burden of neuropathic pain in the United States: BEAT Neuropathic Pain Observational Study
title_fullStr Pain severity and the economic burden of neuropathic pain in the United States: BEAT Neuropathic Pain Observational Study
title_full_unstemmed Pain severity and the economic burden of neuropathic pain in the United States: BEAT Neuropathic Pain Observational Study
title_short Pain severity and the economic burden of neuropathic pain in the United States: BEAT Neuropathic Pain Observational Study
title_sort pain severity and the economic burden of neuropathic pain in the united states: beat neuropathic pain observational study
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4218900/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25378940
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/CEOR.S63323
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