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Supplementary data: Burden of illness for patients with primary biliary cholangitis: an observational study of clinical characteristics and healthcare resource utilization

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posted on 2025-03-06, 15:14 authored by Robert Gish, Joanna P MacEwan, Alina Levine, Dannielle Lebovitch, Leona Bessonova, Darren T Wheeler, Radhika Nair, Alan Bonder
<p dir="ltr"><b>These are peer-reviewed supplementary materials for the article</b><b> </b><b>'</b><b>Burden of illness for patients with primary </b><b>biliary cholangitis: an observational study </b><b>of clinical characteristics and healthcare </b><b>resource utilization</b><b>'</b><b> </b><b>published in the</b><b> </b><b><i>Journal of Comparative Effectiveness Research</i></b><b>.</b></p><ul><li><b>Supplementary Table 1:</b> Codes used for cirrhosis diagnosis and imaging biopsy procedures</li></ul><p dir="ltr"><b>Aim:</b> To evaluate the clinical characteristics and healthcare resource utilization for acute care and its costs for patients with primary biliary cholangitis (PBC) with or without cirrhosis.<b> Materials & methods: </b>This retrospective observational cohort study was conducted using two datasets (Komodo’s Healthcare Map™ [Komodo Health] and Optum Clinformatics R ? Data Mart [CDM] database) between 2015 and 2023. Patients (≥18 years) with PBC were identified based on ≥1 inpatient or ≥2 outpatient claims. Healthcare resource utilization for acute care (hospitalizations and emergency department [ED] visits [not leading to hospitalization]) were assessed in both datasets, and associated medical costs were evaluated in Optum CDM. <b>Results:</b> In Komodo Health, of the 29,758 patients with PBC (mean age: 59.2 years), 21.6% had cirrhosis and 50.4% of patients with cirrhosis had Medicaid or Medicare coverage. Of the total 8143 patients in Optum CDM (mean age: 67.0 years), 20.7% had cirrhosis, and most were enrolled in Medicare (69.7%). There was a larger proportion of men in the cirrhosis group compared with the no-cirrhosis group in Komodo Health (31.7 vs 16.3%) and Optum CDM (29.7 vs 16.5%). Annually, among patients with cirrhosis who had a hospitalization, 69.3% had additional hospitalizations, and among patients who had an ED visit, 52.9% had additional ED visits in Komodo Health; similar results were observed in Optum CDM. Among patients with at least one acute-care event, the mean annual acute-care costs with and without cirrhosis were $113,568 and $47,436, respectively. <b>Conclusion: </b>Data from two large healthcare claims databases showed that the majority of patients who had at least one acute-care event experienced additional acute-care events, particularly among those with cirrhosis. Timely treatment to avoid hospitalization and disease progression may help mitigate the clinical and economic burden for patients with PBC.</p>

Funding

This study was funded by Intercept Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

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