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. 2023 Feb:253:144-151.e1.
doi: 10.1016/j.jpeds.2022.09.033. Epub 2022 Sep 27.

Health Care Resource Utilization by Patients with Alagille Syndrome

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Free article

Health Care Resource Utilization by Patients with Alagille Syndrome

Noelle H Ebel et al. J Pediatr. 2023 Feb.
Free article

Abstract

Objective: To assess and characterize health care resource utilization (HRU) in children with the rare, genetic, multisystem disorder, Alagille syndrome.

Study design: This retrospective analysis reviewed commercially insured and Medicaid-insured claims from October 1, 2015 to December 31, 2019 to assess HRU in patients with Alagille syndrome. As there is no specific International Classification ofDiseases-10 code for Alagille syndrome, patients were identified using the following algorithm: ≥1 claim with diagnosis code Q44.7 (other congenital malformations of the liver); <18 years of age, with no history of biliary atresia (International Classification ofDiseases-10 code: Q44.2); and ≥6 months of insurance eligibility prior to diagnosis. HRU was summarized per patient per year over all available claims postdiagnosis.

Results: A total of 171 commercially insured and 215 Medicaid-insured patients with Alagille syndrome were available for analysis. Annually, commercially insured and Medicaid-insured patients averaged 31 medical visits (range, 1.5-237) and 48 medical visits (range, 0.7-690), respectively. The most common visits were outpatient with the majority encompassing lab/imaging and primary care visits (commercially insured: 21 [range, 0.0-183]; Medicaid-insured: 26 [range, 0.0-609]). Inpatient visits were the highest driver of costs in both the commercial and Medicaid populations.

Conclusions: Patients with Alagille syndrome have a substantial HRU burden driven largely by numerous outpatient visits and costly inpatient stays. Given the complexity and variability of Alagille syndrome presentation, patients may benefit from multidisciplinary and subspecialized care.

Keywords: cholestasis; cholestatic liver disease; economic burden; health economics; pediatric disease.

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