Author/Authors :
Carolyn Harley، نويسنده , , Hong Li، نويسنده , , Patricia Corey-Lisle، نويسنده , , Gilbert J. L’Italien، نويسنده , , William Carson، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Background Bipolar disorder is the
most expensive mental disorder for US employer
health plans. No published studies have examined
the impact of comorbid diabetes on the cost of
treating bipolar disorder. The objectives of this work
were to determine the direct costs incurred by patients
with bipolar disorder in a US managed care
plan, and to examine the influence (1) of drug
therapy regimen on bipolar-related costs, and (2) of
diabetes on bipolar-related and all-cause costs.
Methods A retrospective analysis of claims in a US
private insurance database from January 1, 1999
through December 31, 2002 was performed. The
database included at least 4.7 million enrollees each
year. Diagnosis codes were used to identify patients
with bipolar disorder; patients with diabetes were
identified using diagnosis codes and medication use.
Results From 1999–2002, treated bipolar disorder
was identified in 262 (33.9) [mean (standard deviation)]
cases per 100,000 enrollees. Among patients
with bipolar disorder in this cohort, between 6.3 and
7.4% were treated for diabetes each year. Among
patients with newly treated bipolar disorder, 61.8%
received initial therapy with only mood stabilizers,
24.3% received only atypical antipsychotics, and
13.9% received both. Mean all-cause cost for patients
with bipolar disorder was US$2,690 in the 6 months
before the first bipolar-related claim, and US$6,826
in the following year. Of the latter cost, bipolar-related
cost was US$1,272. Patients with comorbid
diabetes had much higher all-cause cost (US$11,317)
than those without diabetes in the year following the
first bipolar-related claim, but only slightly higher
bipolar-related cost (US$1,349). Among newly treated
bipolar disorder patients, all-cause and bipolarrelated
cost in the year after diagnosis was lowest in
patients receiving only mood stabilizers. Ordinary
least squares regression analysis found that treatment
with mood stabilizers only was associated with
41% lower bipolar-related cost than treatment with
atypical antipsychotics only (P < .001). Significant
individual associations were also found between
bipolar-related cost and bipolar disorder I diagnosis,
severe bipolar disorder and comorbid personality
disorders (P < .001 for each) but not comorbid
diabetes (P = .27). Conclusions These results suggest
that patients with bipolar disorder who receive only
mood stabilizer therapy incur lower bipolar-related
and all-cause cost than those receiving only atypical
antipsychotics. In contrast to that for all-cause cost,
comorbid diabetes had little impact on direct costs
related to treating bipolar disorder itself