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Real-world costs of obesity-related complications over eight years: a US retrospective cohort study in 28,500 individuals

Medicine and Health

Real-world costs of obesity-related complications over eight years: a US retrospective cohort study in 28,500 individuals

J. Pearson-stuttard, T. Banerji, et al.

This groundbreaking research by Jonathan Pearson-Stuttard and team reveals the compelling relationship between obesity-related complications and rising healthcare costs in the US. Over an eight-year study, they found that as complications increase, so do costs, particularly in outpatient care. Discover the financial implications of chronic conditions like kidney disease and diabetes!

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Obesity-related complications (ORCs) are associated with high costs for healthcare systems. We assessed the relationship between comorbidity burden, represented by both number and type of 14 specific ORCs, and total healthcare costs over time in people with obesity in the USA. METHODS: Adults (≥ 18 years old) from linked electronic medical records and administrative claims, with BMI 30–<70 kg/m² between 1 January 2007 and 31 March 2012 (index date: earliest BMI), and continuous enrollment for ≥1 year pre-index and ≥8 years post-index, were included. Individuals were grouped by type and number of ORCs during the pre-index baseline year. Primary outcome: annual total adjusted direct per-person healthcare costs. RESULTS: Of 28,583 individuals, 12,686 had no ORCs, 7242 had one ORC, 4180 had two ORCs, and 4475 had three or more ORCs in the baseline year. Annual adjusted direct healthcare costs increased with the number of ORCs and over the 8-year follow-up. Outpatient costs were the greatest contributor to baseline annual direct costs, irrespective of the number of ORCs. For specific ORCs, costs generally increased gradually over follow-up; the largest percentage increases from year 1 to year 8 were observed for chronic kidney disease (+78.8%) and type 2 diabetes (+47.8%). The presence of three or more ORCs was determined to be a cost driver in people with obesity for at least the following 8 years.
Publisher
International Journal of Obesity
Published On
Authors
Jonathan Pearson-Stuttard, Tania Banerji, Silvia Capuccio, Elisabeth de Laguniech, Mads D. Faurby, Christine Lundegaard Haase, Kasper Sommer Matthiessen, Aimee M. Near, Jenny Tse, Xiaohui Zhao, Marc Evans
Tags
obesity
healthcare costs
chronic conditions
outpatient care
complications
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