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Copyright ©2008 The WJG Press and Baishideng. All rights reserved.
World J Gastroenterol. Nov 21, 2008; 14(43): 6641-6647
Published online Nov 21, 2008. doi: 10.3748/wjg.14.6641
How expensive is inflammatory bowel disease? A critical analysis
Selwyn Odes
Selwyn Odes, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases Unit, Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Soroka Medical Center and Ben Gurion University of the Negev, PO Box 151, Beer Sheva 84101, Israel
Correspondence to: Selwyn Odes, MD AGAF, Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Soroka Medical Center, PO Box 151, Beer Sheva 84101, Israel. odes@bgumail.bgu.ac.il
Telephone: +972-8-640-0242 Fax: +972-8-623-3083
Received: July 5, 2008
Revised: October 27, 2008
Accepted: November 3, 2008
Published online: November 21, 2008
Abstract

Economic analysis of chronic diseases is required for proper allocation of resources and understanding cost-effectiveness studies of new therapies. Studies on health care cost of ulcerative colitis (UC) and Crohn’s disease (CD) are reviewed here. These studies were carried out in various countries with disparate health care systems. In the United States, data were often modeled or retrieved from large insurance schemes. Surgery and in-patient hospitalization accounted for over half the outlay on UC and CD. Fistulous disease in CD and parenteral nutrition were very costly. In Canada, overall charges were lower than in the United States, but there too, surgical costs were relatively high. In European studies, economic data were abstracted directly from patients’ files. One pan-European study examined the outlay on UC and CD in a community-based prospective inception cohort followed for 10 years. Overall costs in Europe were lower than in the United States. Surgery, hospitalization, year of follow-up, disease phenotype in CD and ASCA-positivity impacted significantly on costs. In all studies, the cost data were right skewed, aminosalicylates were expensive drugs, and biological agents the most expensive; moreover indirect costs were not calculated. Infliximab raised costs considerably in CD, but there were no long-term follow-up studies, so that the cost-benefit of biological agents remains unknown. In conclusion, costs of managing UC and CD vary by country, surgery, genotype and several other factors. The most important question for further research is whether the biological therapies are cost-effective in the long-term.

Keywords: Inflammatory bowel disease; Ulcerative colitis; Crohn's disease; Cost-analysis; Medical economics