AI Article Synopsis

  • Hemophilia A causes unpredictable bleeding and has chronic health issues, but there’s a lack of national data on treatment patterns, costs, and patient characteristics.
  • This study focused on adult males with severe hemophilia A (FVIII levels < 1%), analyzing their demographics, healthcare usage, and estimated treatment costs using data from the American Thrombosis and Hemostasis Network between 2013 and 2019.
  • Out of 3,677 participants, a significant number had co-existing conditions like HCV (24.1%) and HIV (13.7%), and many were not regularly seen at hemophilia treatment centers, with an average of 2.8 visits per year per patient.

Article Abstract

Hemophilia A is characterized by unpredictable spontaneous bleeds and chronic comorbidities. However, limited data exists at the national level into detailed management patterns related to patient clinical characteristics, representative real-world dosing and treatment frequency, and costs. To assess and characterize the US severe hemophilia A (SHA) population, including subgroups of patients, in terms of clinical and demographic characteristics, healthcare resource utilization received at hemophilia treatment centers (HTCs), and projected annual costs of treatment utilizing data from the ATHNdataset of the American Thrombosis and Hemostasis Network (ATHN). Adult male people with SHA (PwSHA) (FVIII < 1%) were identified in the ATHNdataset between January 2013 and September 2019. This retrospective cohort study described patients' demographic and clinical characteristics, clinical history, as well as the HTC-related health resource utilization (HRU), treatment utilization, and projected annual treatment costs of US PwSHA received over the most recent year. Results are reported for the overall population and for three mutually exclusive subpopulations of patients: PwSHA with a history of and/or current inhibitors, PwSHA without a history of inhibitors but with (or a history of) one or more transfusion-transmitted infections (hepatitis B virus [HBV], hepatitis C virus [HCV], or human immunodeficiency virus [HIV]), and PwSHA without a history of inhibitors or of transfusion-transmitted infections (HBV, HCV, or HIV). Of the overall PwSHA cohort ( = 3677), there was a high prevalence of HCV (24.1%) and HIV (13.7%), while the prevalence of HBV (4.9%) was lower. Note that 20.5% of PwSHA overall currently or ever had FVIII inhibitors. On average, PwSHA had 2.8 total HTC visits per year, including 0.9 comprehensive care visits, 1.1 telephone contact visits, 0.5 office visits, and 0.1 surgeries or other procedures. However, 23.3% of PwSHA were not seen at an HTC, and 33.8% of PwSHA did not have a comprehensive care visit during their most recent year of data. HTC-related HRU was similar between the overall cohort and across the patient subpopulations, although PwSHA and inhibitors had more frequent HTC visits (a mean of 3.6 visits annually vs. 2.5-2.8 in the other groups). Using reported treatment frequency and dosing, estimated mean annual hemophilia treatment costs varied by treatment and across the three subpopulations: extended half-life factor product ($893,609-934,301 by subpopulation), standard half-life factor product ($798,700-930,812), plasma-derived factor product ($613,220-801,061), and non-factor product treatment ($765,289-833,240). This study summarized recent sociodemographic and clinical characteristics, HTC-related HRU, and HA treatments and projected costs among adult PwSHA, including among key subpopulations of PwSHA. PwSHA experience substantial clinical and resource burden on a chronic basis, despite the care coordination efforts of ATHN-affiliated HTCs. These findings motivate further exploration of the drivers of resource utilization, observed differences across subpopulations and other disparities, and ongoing monitoring of clinical and treatment burden in the face of an evolving care landscape.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9176109PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jha2.412DOI Listing

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