1. Health care use and cost of treatment for adolescents and young adults with opioid use disorder.
- Author
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Orme S, Zarkin GA, Dunlap LJ, Monico LB, Gryczynski J, Fishman MJ, Schwartz RP, O'Grady KE, and Mitchell SG
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Humans, Young Adult, Counseling, Health Care Costs, Narcotic Antagonists therapeutic use, Buprenorphine therapeutic use, Opioid-Related Disorders drug therapy
- Abstract
Background: Few studies have examined the cost of medication for opioid use disorder (MOUD) with counseling for the adolescent and young adult population. This study calculated the health care utilization and cost of MOUD treatment, other substance use disorder treatment, and general health care for adolescents and young adults receiving treatment for opioid use disorder., Methods: The study randomized youth ages 15 to 21 (N = 288) equally into the two study conditions: extended-release naltrexone (XR-NTX) or treatment as usual (TAU). While participants committed to treatment based on randomization the study observed considerable nonadherence to both randomized conditions. Instead of using the randomly assigned study conditions, we present descriptive costs by the type of MOUD treatment received: XR-NTX only, buprenorphine only, any other combination of MOUD treatments, and no MOUD. Health care use was aggregated over the 6-month period for each participant, and we calculated average/participant utilization for each treatment group. To determine participant costs, we multiplied the unit costs of health care services obtained from the literature by the reported amount of health care utilization for each participant. We then calculated the mean, standard error, median and IQR for MOUD costs, other substance use disorder treatment costs and general healthcare cost from the health care sector perspective., Results: On average, participants in the XR-NTX only group received 2.6 doses of XR-NTX (equivalent to approximately 78 days of treatment). The buprenorphine only group had an average of 97 days of buprenorphine treatment. The XR-NTX only group had higher/patient costs compared to participants in the buprenorphine only group ($10,491 vs. $8765) and higher XR-NTX utilization would further increase costs. Participants in the any other MOUD combination group had the highest total costs ($14,627) while participants in the no MOUD group at the lowest ($3453)., Discussion: Our cost analysis calculates the real-world cost of MOUD treatment and, while not generalizable, provides policy makers an estimate of costs for adolescents and young adults. We found that participants in the XR-NTX only group received fewer days of medication compared to the buprenorphine only group, but their medication costs were higher due to the cost of XR-NTX injections. While the buprenorphine only group had the highest number of days of medication utilization of all the groups, the average number of days of medication utilization was considerably shorter than the six-month treatment period., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: Mr. Orme and Drs. Dunlap, Zarkin, Mitchell and O'Grady report no conflicts. Dr. Schwartz has consulted for Verily Life Sciences. He is Principal Investigator of a NIDA-funded study that will be receiving free medication from Indivior and Alkermes. Dr. Monico received research funding from Indivior. Dr. Gryczynski is part owner of COG Analytics and has received research funding (paid to his institution and including project-related salary support) from Indivior. Dr. Fishman has been a consultant for Alkermes, Verily Life Sciences, Drug Delivery LLC and US World Meds, and has received research funding from Alkermes and US World Meds., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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