TY - JOUR
T1 - Estimating Life Expectancy and Lifetime Healthcare Costs for Alzheimer's Disease in Taiwan
T2 - Does the Age of Disease Onset Matter?
AU - Yeh, Tian Shin
AU - Wang, Jung Der
AU - Ku, Li Jung Elizabeth
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by grant MOST 105-2628-B-006-011. The authors would like to thank Ms. Tsuey-Hwa Hu for her technical assistance and statistical consultation on the ISQoL2 software.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020-IOS Press and the authors. All rights reserved.
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - Background: People with early onset Alzheimer's disease (EOAD) seem to suffer greater impact. But there is a lack of population-based studies on loss of life expectancy (LE) and lifetime healthcare costs. Objectives: We conducted this study to estimate LE, expected years of life lost (EYLL), and lifetime healthcare costs for Alzheimer's disease (AD) in Taiwan stratified by onset age and gender, using a method which integrates the product of the survival function and the mean cost function over a lifetime horizon. Methods: We linked the National Health Insurance datasets with the National Mortality Registry and extrapolated the survival to lifetime to estimate the mean cumulative costs since the date of the first AD diagnosis using medical claims between 2001 and 2012. Results: A total of 21,615 mild to moderate AD patients (including 20,358 late-onset (LOAD) and 1,257 EOAD) were recruited. The average onset age for EOAD was 61 years old, while that of LOAD was 78. Although the LE of EOAD was 4.8 years longer than that of LOAD due to younger age, the EYLL for the former was 8.7 years versus 1.7 years for the latter. EOAD also had higher lifetime healthcare costs than the LOAD group (USD37,957±2,403 versus 33,809±786). Conclusions: Since EOAD patients had both higher EYLL and lifetime healthcare costs than LOAD, future studies should pay more attention to the needs of EOAD patients.
AB - Background: People with early onset Alzheimer's disease (EOAD) seem to suffer greater impact. But there is a lack of population-based studies on loss of life expectancy (LE) and lifetime healthcare costs. Objectives: We conducted this study to estimate LE, expected years of life lost (EYLL), and lifetime healthcare costs for Alzheimer's disease (AD) in Taiwan stratified by onset age and gender, using a method which integrates the product of the survival function and the mean cost function over a lifetime horizon. Methods: We linked the National Health Insurance datasets with the National Mortality Registry and extrapolated the survival to lifetime to estimate the mean cumulative costs since the date of the first AD diagnosis using medical claims between 2001 and 2012. Results: A total of 21,615 mild to moderate AD patients (including 20,358 late-onset (LOAD) and 1,257 EOAD) were recruited. The average onset age for EOAD was 61 years old, while that of LOAD was 78. Although the LE of EOAD was 4.8 years longer than that of LOAD due to younger age, the EYLL for the former was 8.7 years versus 1.7 years for the latter. EOAD also had higher lifetime healthcare costs than the LOAD group (USD37,957±2,403 versus 33,809±786). Conclusions: Since EOAD patients had both higher EYLL and lifetime healthcare costs than LOAD, future studies should pay more attention to the needs of EOAD patients.
KW - Early-onset Alzheimer's disease
KW - healthcare costs
KW - late-onset Alzheimer's disease
KW - life expectancy
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U2 - 10.3233/JAD-181060
DO - 10.3233/JAD-181060
M3 - Article
C2 - 31771049
AN - SCOPUS:85077790794
SN - 1387-2877
VL - 73
SP - 307
EP - 315
JO - Journal of Alzheimer's Disease
JF - Journal of Alzheimer's Disease
IS - 1
ER -