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Economic burden of lung cancer in Turkey: a cost of illness study from payer perspective.

Authors :
Cicin, Irfan
Oksuz, Ergun
Karadurmus, Nuri
Malhan, Simten
Gumus, Mahmut
Yilmaz, Ulku
Cansever, Levent
Cinarka, Halit
Cetinkaya, Erdogan
Kiyik, Murat
Ozet, Ahmet
Lung Cancer Report Study Group Turkey
Source :
Health Economics Review; 6/26/2021, Vol. 11 Issue 1, p1-12, 12p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background: This study was designed to estimate economic burden of lung cancer in Turkey from payer perspective based on expert panel opinion on practice patterns in clinical practice. Methods: In this cost of illness study, direct medical cost was calculated based on cost items related to outpatient visits, laboratory and radiological tests, hospitalizations/interventions, drug treatment, adverse events and metastasis. Indirect cost was calculated based on lost productivity due to early retirement, morbidity and premature death resulting from the illness, the value of lost productivity due to time spent by family caregivers and cost of formal caregivers. Results: Cost analysis revealed the total per patient annual direct medical cost for small cell lung cancer to be €8772), for non-small-cell lung cancer to be €10,167. Total annual direct medical cost was €497.9 million, total annual indirect medical cost was €1.1 billion and total economic burden of lung cancer was €1.6 billion. Hospitalization/interventions (41%) and indirect costs (68.6%) were the major cost drivers for total direct costs and the overall economic burden of lung cancer, respectively. Conclusions: Our findings indicate per patient direct medical costs of small cell lung cancer and non-small-cell lung cancer to be substantial and comparable, indicating the substantial economic burden of lung cancer in terms of both direct and indirect costs. Our findings indicate that hospitalization/interventions cost item and indirect costs were the major cost drivers for total direct costs and the overall economic burden of lung cancer, respectively. Our findings emphasize the potential role of improved cancer prevention and early diagnosis strategies, by enabling cost savings related to drug treatment and metastasis management cost items, in sustainability of cancer treatments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
21911991
Volume :
11
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Health Economics Review
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
151103523
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13561-021-00322-2