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. 2016 Aug;75(2):67-76.
doi: 10.1111/cod.12590. Epub 2016 May 24.

Systematic review of cost-of-illness studies in hand eczema

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Systematic review of cost-of-illness studies in hand eczema

Klaziena Politiek et al. Contact Dermatitis. 2016 Aug.

Erratum in

  • Erratum.
    [No authors listed] [No authors listed] Contact Dermatitis. 2017 Dec;77(6):432. doi: 10.1111/cod.12903. Contact Dermatitis. 2017. PMID: 29164692 No abstract available.

Abstract

The individual burden of disease in hand eczema patients is considerable. However, little is known about the socio-economic impact of this disease. The aims of this review were to evaluate the literature on cost-of-illness in hand eczema, and to compose a checklist for future use. The literature was retrieved from the MEDLINE and EMBASE databases up to October 2015. Quality evaluation was based on seven relevant items in cost-of-illness studies. Cost data (direct and indirect) were extracted and converted into euros (2014 price level) by use of the Dutch Consumer Price Index. Six articles were included. The mean annual total cost per patient ranged from €1311 [corrected] to €9792 (direct cost per patient, €521 to €3722; [corrected] and indirect cost per patient, €100 to €6846). Occupational hand eczema patients showed indirect costs up to 70% of total costs, mainly because of absenteeism. A large diversity in hand eczema severity was found between studies. The socio-economic burden of hand eczema is considerable, especially for more severe and/or occupational hand eczema. Absenteeism from paid work leads to a high total cost-of-illness, although disregard of presenteeism often leads to underestimation of indirect costs. Differences in included cost components, the occupational status of patients and hand eczema severity make international comparison difficult. A checklist was added to standardize the approach to cost-of-illness studies in hand eczema.

Keywords: cost-of-illness; hand eczema; health economics; societal costs; systematic review.

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