Title Patient and economic burdens of postherpetic neuralgia in China
Authors Yu, Sheng-Yuan
Fan, Bi-Fa
Yang, Fei
DiBonaventura, Marco
Chen, Yu-Xuan
Li, Ruo-Yu
King-Concialdi, Kristen
Kudel, Ian
Hlavacek, Patrick
Hopps, Markay
Udall, Margarita
Sadosky, Alesia
Cappelleri, Joseph C.
Affiliation Chinese Peoples Liberat Army Gen Hosp, Dept Neurol, Beijing 100853, Peoples R China
China Japan Friendship Hosp, Pain Management Ctr, Dept Pain Med, Beijing, Peoples R China
Pfizer, New York, NY USA
Pfizer China, Beijing, Peoples R China
Peking Univ, Hosp 1, Dept Dermatol, Beijing, Peoples R China
Kantar Hlth, New York, NY USA
Pfizer Inc, Groton, CT 06340 USA
Keywords postherpetic neuralgia
disease burden
health-related quality-of-life
EQ-5D
China
health care costs
productivity
Issue Date 2019
Publisher CLINICOECONOMICS AND OUTCOMES RESEARCH
Abstract Background: Little is known about the patient-reported and economic burdens of post-herpetic neuralgia (PHN) among China's urban population. Methods: This noninterventional study was conducted among adults >= 40 years with PHN who were seeking medical care at eight urban hospitals in China. At one study site, patients completed a questionnaire evaluating the patient-reported disease burden (N=185). The questionnaire consisted of validated patient-reported outcomes including the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI), 5-dimension, 3-level EuroQol (EQ-5D-3L), Medical Outcomes Study Sleep Scale, and Work Productivity and Activity Impairment Questionnaire for Specific Health Problems. Questions on non-pharmacologic therapy and out-of-pocket (OOP) expenses were also included. At all study sites, physicians (N=100) completed a structured review of patient charts (N=828), which was used to derive health care resource utilization and associated costs from the societal perspective. Annual costs in Chinese Yuan Renminbi (RMB) for the year 2016 were converted to US dollars (US$). Results: Patients (N=185, mean age 63.0 years, 53.5% female) reported pain of moderate severity (mean BPI score 4.6); poor sleep quantity (average of 5.3 hrs per night) and quality; and poorer health status on the EQ-5D-3L relative to the general Chinese population. Respondents also reported average annual OOP costs of RMB 16,873 (US$2541) per patient, mainly for prescription PHN medications (RMB 8990 [US$1354]). Substantial work impairment among employed individuals resulted in annual indirect costs of RMB 28,025 (US $4221). In the chart review, physicians reported that patients (N=828) had substantial health resource utilization, especially office visits; 98% had all-cause and 95% had PHN-related office visits. Total annual direct medical costs were RMB 10,002 (US$1507), mostly driven by hospitalizations (RMB 8781 [US$1323]). Conclusion: In urban China, PHN is associated with a patient-reported burden, affecting sleep, quality-of-life, and daily activities including work impairment, and an economic burden resulting from direct medical costs and indirect costs due to lost productivity. These burdens suggest the need for appropriate prevention and management management of PHN.
URI http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11897/543708
ISSN 1178-6981
DOI 10.2147/CEOR.S203920
Indexed ESCI
Appears in Collections: 第一医院

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