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Title: Systemic lupus erythematosus and associated healthcare resource consumption in selected cities from the Russian Federation, Republic of Kazakhstan and Ukraine: the ESSENCE study. Author: Nasonov E, Soloviev S, Davidson JE, Lila A, Togizbayev G, Ivanova R, Baimukhamedov C, Omarbekova Z, Iaremenko O, Gnylorybov A, Shevchuk S, Vasylyev A, Makarova J, Tariq L. Journal: J Med Econ; 2018 Oct; 21(10):1006-1015. PubMed ID: 29992845. Abstract: OBJECTIVES: To evaluate healthcare resource (HR) consumption associated with Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE) management in adult patients with active autoantibody positive disease in the Russian Federation, Republic of Kazakhstan, and Ukraine. METHODS: The ESSENCE was a retrospective, observational study, and included data on patients' clinical characteristics and SLE-related HR use (laboratory, biopsy, imaging tests, medications, visits to specialists, outpatient visits, hospitalizations) during 2010 from the 12 specialized rheumatologic centers. RESULTS: A total of 436 SLE patients were included in the analyses, with 232 patients being enrolled in Russia, 110 in Kazakhstan, and 94 in Ukraine. The mean age was 36-42 years and median SLE duration was 3-6.8 years across the countries. Extrapolation to total country population showed that, in 2010, visits to specialists (who assign treatment for organs involved/damaged by SLE) were the most frequently used HR (from 13,439 visits in Kazakhstan to 23,510 in Russia), followed by hospitalizations (from 2,950 in Kazakhstan to 6,267 in Russia) and outpatient visits (from 1,654 visits in Russia to 8,064 in Kazakhstan). Compared to chronic active patients (SLE persistent during last year), patients with relapsing-remitting SLE (at least one flare alternated by one remission per year) had a higher rate of visits to specialists (100% vs 60.8%, p < .001) and hospitalizations (98.9% vs 60.8%, p < .001). Compared to patients without flares, patients experiencing flares had a higher rate of unplanned visits to specialists (86.2% vs 6.3%, p < .001), were more often hospitalized (both ICU and non-ICU) (100.0% vs 50.0%, p < .001), and had a longer duration of ICU hospitalization (25.9 days vs 17.5 days, p < .001). CONCLUSIONS: Specialist visits are the most frequently consumed SLE-related healthcare recourse in the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) countries. A relapsing-remitting SLE profile and the occurrence of flares significantly raise healthcare resource consumption.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]