Healthcare Utilization and Costs Associated with Dabigatran Compared to Warfarin Treatment in Newly Diagnosed Patients with Non-valvular Atrial Fibrillation.
Curr Med Res Opin. 2015 Sep 11;:1-23
Authors: Francis K, Yu C, Alvrtsyan H, Sander S, Ghosh S, Rao Y, Sanchez H, Matchar D
Abstract
PURPOSE: Real-world healthcare resource utilization and costs were compared among patients with non valvular atrial fibrillation (NVAF) receiving either dabigatran or warfarin.
METHODS: A retrospective cohort study was conducted using administrative claims data from the United States Department of Defense (DOD) Military Health System. Patients with newly diagnosed AF initiated on dabigatran or warfarin were identified using ICD-9 diagnosis, procedure and drug codes. Patients were observed for 3 months prior to treatment initiation to ascertain a diagnosis of valvular heart disease and 12-months for exclusion of those with a history of anticoagulation therapy. Propensity score matching was used to balance baseline characteristics between the two treatment cohorts. Medical and pharmacy utilization and costs were compared between dabigatran and warfarin treatment groups for 3 and 12 months following treatment initiation.
RESULTS: 1,102 patients with newly diagnosed NVAF initiated on dabigatran were matched with corresponding warfarin-treated patients. In 12 months following initiation of anticoagulation, the mean medical costs for patients initiated on dabigatran were significantly lower than for patients initiated on warfarin (-$6,299, p<.001), largely due to few hospitalizations (-0.162, p=0.009). While pharmacy costs were higher ($4,369, p<0.001) for dabigatran, overall healthcare costs were significantly lower compared with patients on warfarin (12-months: -$1,940, p<.001). Mean hospital length of stay between these two groups were similar (6.033 days for dabigatran vs 6.318 days for warfarin, p= 0.139).
CONCLUSION: Despite higher pharmacy costs for NVAF patients initiated on dabigatran vs warfarin, this was more than offset by lower utilization of medical care resources.
PMID: 26359333 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]