Montreal, September 15, 2008 – In a retrospective analysis of more than 30,000 female Medicare patients 65 years and older, osteoporosis fractures resulted in fracture-related medical expenses of $15,522 per person over three years. The study, presented at the American Society for Bone and Mineral Research (ASBMR) 30th Annual Meeting, is the first to analyze the actual long-term fracture-related medical expenses incurred over a three-year period using a U.S. medical claims database.
Medicare costs were evaluated for successive six-month periods following a fracture. Each period was compared to the six months prior to the initial fracture to determine the excess fracture-related expenses. Nearly a quarter of the total additional medical costs were incurred beyond the first six months of acute care. Patients with wrist, hip, humerus, and clavicle fractures incurred excess medical costs continuously over each six month period of the three-year follow-up.
"The medical needs resulting from an osteoporotic fracture extend well beyond simply caring for the broken bone," said Diana Brixner, RPh, PhD, Executive Director of the Pharmacotherapy Outcomes Research Center, University of Utah Health Sciences Center. "Beyond the acute care needs, long-term care as a result of the fracture is the next largest expense, but other health problems such as pain, disability, and depression related to the fracture can occur and also contribute to the expanded medical expenses."
The majority of patients (64 percent) were not treated for osteoporosis during the three years following their fracture, despite being at high risk for suffering another fracture. Fourteen percent of patients experienced another fracture during the three-year follow-up period, contributing an additional $16,872 per patient in Medicare medical expenses. The average time before occurrence of the subsequent fracture was approximately 13 months. Nonvertebral fractures accounted for 85 percent of all the fragility fractures and 87 percent of the total additional medical expenses observed in the study.
"Significant patient morbidity and medical expense could be spared if osteoporosis was not under diagnosed and undertreated," said Dr. Brixner. "Therapies that help prevent both vertebral and nonvertebral fractures can help mitigate fracture-related downstream costs. As our population ages, more than ever, patients who are at risk need to be identified and considered for treatment."
Study Details
In this analysis, women aged 65 years and older were identified from a medical and pharmaceutical claims database (Medstat MarketScan®) and had a new Medicare claim for a closed non-traumatic (index) fracture at any of seven skeletal sites (hip, wrist, humerus, clavicle, leg, pelvis or spine) between July 1, 2000 and June 30, 2005. Out of 1,665,837 women 65 years and older, 31,758 (3 percent) were identified with a Medicare claim for one of the specified fragility fractures. Women with a claim for malignant neoplasm, radiation oncology or chemotherapy were excluded. The cohort was followed in 6-month increments over a 3-year follow-up period. To estimate the fracture-related excess medical cost, each post-fracture time increment was compared to the 6-month period preceding the fracture. Only Medicare payments were included in the analysis. The excess medical cost was examined by place of service, fracture site, and subsequent fractures and reported in 2007 US dollars. A women was considered to be on osteoporosis therapy if she had at least 2 prescriptions with a therapy indicated for the treatment of osteoporosis, without a gap greater than 45 days between refills
Source: Dorland Global Public Relations