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Epidemiology and economic burden of Huntington’s disease: a Canadian provincial public health system perspective

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Version 2 2022-02-08, 19:20
Version 1 2022-01-25, 09:40
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posted on 2022-02-08, 19:20 authored by Eileen Shaw, Michelle Mayer, Paul Ekwaru, Suzanne McMullen, Erin Graves, Jennifer W. Wu, Nathalie Budd, Bridget Maturi, Tara Cowling, Tiago A. Mestre

To evaluate the epidemiology, healthcare resource utilization, and direct healthcare costs associated with Huntington’s disease in a Canadian setting with a universal healthcare system.

Using Albertan administrative health data, a retrospective cohort was identified applying an algorithm requiring two HD diagnostic codes within two years, using the first record as the index date (i.e. proxy for diagnosis date), from 1 April 2010 to 31 March 2019 for patients ≥21 years old. Incidence/prevalence measures were evaluated from 1 April 2010 to 31 March 2019, while healthcare resource utilization and healthcare costs per person-year (inflated to 2020 Canadian dollars) were evaluated from index to the end of follow-up (death, moved out of province, or 31 March 2020).

Mean [standard deviation] age at index (n = 395) was 53.9 [13.8] years and 53.7% were female. From 2010 to 2019, annual HD incidence varied between 0.47 and 1.21/100,000 person-years and HD prevalence increased from 7.25 to 9.33/100,000 persons. The mean number of visits per person-year for general and specialist practitioners was 19.2 [18.8] and 12.2 [25.5], respectively. The mean total all-cause direct healthcare costs were $23,211 [$38,599] per person-year, with hospitalizations accounting for 57.8% of all-cause costs. Costs were higher among individuals with a long-term care stay, a proxy for disease severity.

This study utilizes administrative health data to describe the epidemiology of HD and utilization of publicly funded care by individuals with HD. While administrative data presents limitations since it is not collected for research purposes, it provides a population-level examination of the burden of HD. There was a substantial economic burden associated with HD in a Canadian setting.

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