Health-care resource use and costs associated with diabetic and idiopathic gastroparesis: A claims analysis of the first 3 years following the diagnosis of gastroparesis

Neurogastroenterology & Motility, 2022

Background

Due to limited treatment options, many patients with diabetic gastroparesis (DG) or idiopathic gastroparesis (IG) experience inadequate symptom control resulting in increased health-care resource utilization (HRU) and associated costs. We compared all-cause HRU and health-care costs over the 3 years after patients' first gastroparesis diagnosis with that of matched controls without gastroparesis.

Methods

Newly diagnosed adults with DG or IG were identified in Optum's de-identified Clinformatics® Data Mart Database (Q1-2007 to Q1-2019). Patients with DG/IG were matched 1:1 to controls using a mixed approach of exact matching and propensity score matching. The index date was the first gastroparesis diagnosis for cases or randomly selected for controls. All-cause HRU and direct health-care costs per person-year (PPY) were compared between DG/IG cases and controls in Years 1-3 post-index.

Key results

Demographics and comorbidities were balanced between patients with gastroparesis (n = 18,015 [DG]; n = 14,305 [IG]) and controls. In each of the Years 1-3 post-index, patients with DG or IG had significantly higher annual HRU and costs versus controls (mean total cost differences PPY: DG Year 1 $34,885, Year 2 $28,071, Year 3 $25,606; IG Year 1 $23,176, Year 2 $16,627, Year 3 $14,396) (all p < 0.05). Across all 3 years, DG/IG cohorts had approximately twice the costs of controls. HRU and costs were highest in Year 1 post-index for both DG and IG.

Conclusions & inferences

The economic burden of gastroparesis remains high several years after diagnosis, emphasizing the need for chronic treatment to effectively manage symptoms and consequently reduce the burden of this disorder.

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Authors

Chen YJ, Tang W, Ionescu-Ittu R, Ayyagari R, Wu E, Huh SY, Parkman HP