Evaluating the direct medical cost, drug utilization and expenditure for managing Parkinson's disease: a costing study at a medical center in China

Ann Transl Med. 2022 Mar;10(6):330. doi: 10.21037/atm-22-1014.

Abstract

Background: With long-term pharmacotherapy, Parkinson's disease (PD) is expectedly to incur a significant healthcare burden. However, drug utilization and costing study is limited, so is the cost composition and its impact on resource allocation. This study took a healthcare provider's perspective to quantify medical and drug expenses and the utilization of drugs for managing PD and its complications.

Methods: Medical resources use and associated cost of outpatient visits and inpatient admission episodes for PD patients were extracted from electronic medical records at a tertiary hospital in China from 1 January 2016 to 15 August 2018. Total and average direct medical (costs of outpatient visits and inpatient admission episodes) and drug costs were calculated during the study period and each calendar year. Drug cost was quantified by defined daily dose cost (DDDc) and levodopa equivalent dose cost (LEDc) per outpatient visit or inpatient admission episode for PD in Chinese yuan (¥), stratified by medication categories, and presented in descriptive statistics.

Results: Overall, 18,158 outpatient visits and 366 inpatient admissions were incurred by 2,640 outpatients and 330 inpatients, with a median age of 71.0 and 73.5 years, respectively. Drug cost accounted for 97.82% and 23.33% of outpatient and inpatient medical expenditure. The average cost of drugs for managing PD accounted for 60.48% (¥952.50) and 2.70% (¥564.90) of cost per outpatient visit and inpatient episode, while drugs for managing PD complications was 11.38% and 0.70%, respectively. The highest DDDc and LEDc of drugs for managing PD per outpatient visit or inpatient episode were incurred by pramipexole (¥56.90-72.70 and ¥227.48-290.67) and entacapone (¥37.70-45.70 and ¥228.64-276.77). The DDDc and LEDc of pramipexole is more than 10 times that of levodopa/benserazide (DDDc: ¥4.90-5.70; LEDc: ¥10.14-11.98) and carbidopa/levodopa (DDDc: ¥4.00-5.00; LEDc: ¥11.02-13.95).

Conclusions: The outpatient direct medical cost for patients with PD was predominantly attributed to drug cost for managing PD, but drug cost weighed less of the inpatient cost. After adjusting the dose and number of patients, drugs with indirect dopamine effects had an excessively higher cost than dopamine precursors. Their long-term cost-effectiveness in real-world settings warrants further studies.

Keywords: Parkinson’s disease (PD); direct medical cost; drug cost; medications for PD; pharmacoeconomic.