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Respiratory

Healthcare utilization, medical costs and mortality associated with malnutrition in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a matched cohort study

, , , &
Pages 1265-1273 | Received 08 Aug 2018, Accepted 21 Jan 2019, Published online: 15 Mar 2019
 

Abstract

Objective: Although disease-related malnutrition has prognostic implications for patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), its health-economic impact and clinical burdens are uncertain. We conducted a population-level study to investigate these questions.

Methods: We excerpted data relevant to malnutrition, prolonged mechanical ventilation and medications from claims by 1,197,098 patients which were consistent with COPD and registered by the Taiwan National Health Insurance Administration between 2009 and 2013. These patients were separated into cohorts with or without respiratory failure requiring long-term mechanical ventilation, and each cohort was divided to compare cases who developed malnutrition after their first diagnosis consistent with COPD, versus non-malnourished propensity-score matched controls.

Results: The prevalence of malnutrition was 3.8% overall (10,259/287,000 non-ventilator-dependent; 1198/15,829 ventilator-dependent). Propensity-score matched non-ventilator-dependent patients who became malnourished (N = 10,242) had comparatively more hospitalizations, emergency room and outpatient visits, longer hospitalization (all p < .01), and higher mortality (HR = 2.26, 95% CI 2.18–2.34) than non-malnourished controls (N = 40,968). Malnourished ventilator-dependent patients (N = 1197) had higher rates of hospitalization, emergency room and outpatient visits, but shorter hospitalization (all p < .001) and lower mortality (HR = 0.85, 95% CI 0.80–0.93) than matched non-malnourished controls (N = 4788). Total medical expenditure on malnourished non-ventilator-dependent COPD patients was 75% higher than controls (p < .001), whereas malnourished ventilator-dependent patients had total costs 7% lower than controls (p < .001).

Conclusions: Malnourishment among COPD patients who were not dependent on mechanical ventilation was associated with greater healthcare resource utilization and higher aggregate medical costs.

Acknowledgements

The authors thank Dr. David Neil PhD of Full Universe Integrated Marketing Ltd., Taiwan, for professional editorial services, and his colleague Ms. Anabelle Huang for assistance with manuscript preparation project management; these contributions were funded by Abbott Laboratories Services Corp., Taiwan Branch.

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