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. 2024 Mar 1;119(3):497-504.
doi: 10.14309/ajg.0000000000002472. Epub 2023 Aug 10.

Cost of Care for Patients With Cirrhosis

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Cost of Care for Patients With Cirrhosis

Fasiha Kanwal et al. Am J Gastroenterol. .

Abstract

Introduction: There are limited longitudinal data on the cost of treating patients with cirrhosis, which hampers value-based improvement initiatives.

Methods: We conducted a retrospective cohort study of patients with cirrhosis seen in the Veterans Affairs health care system from 2011 to 2015. Patients were followed up through 2019. We identified a sex-matched and age-matched control cohort without cirrhosis. We estimated incremental annual health care costs attributable to cirrhosis for 4 years overall and in subgroups based on severity (compensated, decompensated), cirrhosis complications (ascites, encephalopathy, varices, hepatocellular cancer, acute kidney injury), and comorbidity (Deyo index).

Results: We compared 39,361 patients with cirrhosis with 138,964 controls. The incremental adjusted costs for caring of patients with cirrhosis were $35,029 (95% confidence interval $32,473-$37,585) during the first year and ranged from $14,216 to $17,629 in the subsequent 3 years. Cirrhosis complications accounted for most of these costs. Costs of managing patients with hepatic encephalopathy (year 1 cost, $50,080) or ascites ($50,364) were higher than the costs of managing patients with varices ($20,488) or hepatocellular cancer ($37,639) in the first year. Patients with acute kidney injury or those who had multimorbidity were the most costly at $64,413 and $66,653 in the first year, respectively.

Discussion: Patients with cirrhosis had substantially higher health care costs than matched controls and multimorbid patients had even higher costs. Cirrhosis complications accounted for most of the excess cost, so preventing complications has the largest potential for cost saving and could serve as targets for improvement.

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References

    1. Kanwal F, Kramer JR, Buchanan P, et al. The quality of care provided to patients with cirrhosis and ascites in the Department of Veterans Affairs. Gastroenterology 2012;143(1):70–7.
    1. Kanwal F, Tansel A, Kramer JR, et al. Trends in 30-day and 1-year mortality among patients hospitalized with cirrhosis from 2004 to 2013. Am J Gastroenterol 2017;112(8):1287–97.
    1. Kanwal F, Tapper EB, Ho C, et al. Development of quality measures in cirrhosis by the Practice Metrics Committee of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases. Hepatology 2019;69(4):1787–97.
    1. Volk ML, Kanwal F. Quality of care in the cirrhotic patient. Clin Transl Gastroenterol 2016;7(4):e166.
    1. Learning HCP, Network A. APM Measurement Progress of Alternative Payment Models: 2019 Methodology and Results Report. The MITRE Corporation: McLean, VA, 2019.

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