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Abstract
Background
Acute otitis media (AOM) is the most common cause of pediatric medical visits and antibiotic prescriptions worldwide, but its current impact on the US healthcare system is not clear. The aim of this study was to investigate changes in the incidence of AOM from 2008, just before 13-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine was introduced, to 2014 using US insurance records in the Truven MarketScan® database. The study also examined the costs associated with index AOM events during the two most recent years for which data were available (2013–2014).
Methods
AOM cases in the MarketScan database during 2008–2014 were identified using ICD9 diagnosis codes 381.xx and 382.xx. Incidence rates of healthcare utilization related to the index AOM episode were calculated using the annual number of enrolled person-years as the denominator and the number of individuals with AOM as the numerator. AOM-associated costs were calculated as the mean payment per episode during the 2 years from 2013 to 2014.
Results
The overall annual rate of AOM-related healthcare utilization was 60.5 per 1000 person-years and changed little from 2008 to 2014 (range, 58.4–62.6). Most of this was due to office/outpatient visits (55.7 [range, 52.0–58.8] per 1000 person-years). Emergency department/urgent care visits (4.7 [range 3.7–6.3] per 1000 person-years) and hospitalization (0.0 [range, 0.0–0.1] per 1000 person-years) contributed little. The rate of AOM-related healthcare utilization per 1000 person-years was highest in the youngest children and declined with age (474.3 for < 1 year, 503.9 for 1 year, 316.3 for 2–4 years, 94.9 for 5–17 years, 33.1 for 18–49 years, 28.6 for 50–64 years, 23.7 for 65–74 years, 20.2 for 75–84 years, and 16.1 for ≥85 years). The mean cost per AOM episode in 2013–2014 (95% confidence interval) was $199.0 (198.4–199.6) for office or outpatient visits, $329.6 (328.2–331.0) for emergency department/urgent care visits, and $1592.9 (1422.0–1763.8) for hospitalization.
Conclusions
In the US, AOM-associated healthcare utilization and costs remain substantial. More effective preventive measures such as new vaccines are needed to reduce the burden of AOM.
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