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. 2019 May;114(5):798-803.
doi: 10.14309/ajg.0000000000000143.

Burden and Cost of Outpatient Hemorrhoids in the United States Employer-Insured Population, 2014

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Burden and Cost of Outpatient Hemorrhoids in the United States Employer-Insured Population, 2014

Jeff Y Yang et al. Am J Gastroenterol. 2019 May.

Abstract

Introduction: Although hemorrhoids are a common indication for seeking health care, there are no contemporary estimates of burden and cost. We examined data from an administrative claims database to estimate health care use and aggregate costs.

Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional study using the MarketScan Commercial Claims and Encounters Database for 2014. The analysis included 18.9 million individuals who were aged 18-64 and continuously enrolled with prescription coverage. Outpatient hemorrhoid claims were captured using the International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification diagnosis codes in the first position, as well as Common Procedural Terminology codes. Prescription medications were identified using National Drug Codes. Annual prevalence and costs were determined by summing gross payments for prescription medications, physician encounters, and facility costs. We used validated weights to standardize annual cost estimates to the US employer-insured population.

Results: In 2014, we identified 227,638 individuals with at least one outpatient hemorrhoid-related claim (annual prevalence, 1.2%). Among those, 119,120 had prescription medication claims, 136,125 had physician claims, and 28,663 had facility claims. After standardizing, we estimated that 1.4 million individuals in the US employer-insured population sought care for hemorrhoids in 2014 for a total annual cost of $770 million. This included $322 million in physician claims, $361 million in outpatient facility claims, and $88 million in prescription medication claims.

Conclusions: The estimated economic burden of hemorrhoids in the employer-insured population approaches $800 million annually. Given the substantial and rising burden and cost, expanded research attention should be directed to hemorrhoidal etiology, prevention, and treatment.

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Conflict of interest statement

Disclosures:

Yang JY: No conflicts to disclose

Peery AF: No conflicts to disclose

Lund JL: Dr. Lund received research support from the PhRMA Foundation to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Her spouse is a full-time, paid employee of GlaxoSmithKline.

Pate V: No conflicts to disclose

Sandler RS: No conflicts to disclose

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