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Original Research

Evaluating increased resource use in fibromyalgia using electronic health records

, , , &
Pages 675-683 | Published online: 16 Nov 2016
 

Abstract

Objective

The management of fibromyalgia (FM), a chronic musculoskeletal disease, remains challenging, and patients with FM are often characterized by high health care resource utilization. This study sought to explore potential drivers of all-cause health care resource utilization and other factors associated with high resource use, using a large electronic health records (EHR) database to explore data from patients diagnosed with FM.

Methods

This was a retrospective analysis of de-identified EHR data from the Humedica database. Adults (≥18 years) with FM were identified based on ≥2 International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision codes for FM (729.1) ≥30 days apart between January 1, 2008 and December 31, 2012 and were required to have evidence of ≥12 months continuous care pre- and post-index; first FM diagnosis was the index event; 12-month pre- and post-index reporting periods. Multivariable analysis evaluated relationships between variables and resource utilization.

Results

Patients were predominantly female (81.4%), Caucasian (87.7%), with a mean (standard deviation) age of 54.4 (14.8) years. The highest health care resource utilization was observed for the categories of “medication orders” and “physician office visits,” with 12-month post-index means of 21.2 (21.5) drug orders/patient and 15.1 (18.1) office visits/patient; the latter accounted for 73.3% of all health care visits. Opioids were the most common prescription medication, 44.3% of all patients. The chance of high resource use was significantly increased (P<0.001) 26% among African-Americans vs Caucasians and for patients with specific comorbid conditions ranging from 6% (musculoskeletal pain or depression/bipolar disorder) to 21% (congestive heart failure). Factors significantly associated with increased medications ordered included being female (P<0.001) and specific comorbid conditions (P<0.05).

Conclusion

Physician office visits and pharmacotherapy orders were key drivers of all-cause health care utilization, with demographic factors, opioid use, and specific comorbidities associated with resource intensity. Health systems and providers may find their EHRs to be a useful tool for identifying and managing resource-intensive FM patients.

Acknowledgments

The authors gratefully acknowledge the important contributions of Douglas Weldon of Truven Health Analytics and Erin Thomson, formerly of Truven Health Analytics, for their roles in the research design and analysis of data.

This study was sponsored by Pfizer. Editorial/medical writing support was provided by E Jay Bienen and was funded by Pfizer.

Disclosure

Elizabeth T Masters, Joseph C Cappelleri, and Steven Faulkner are employees and stockholders of Pfizer. Jay M Margolis and David M Smith are employees of Truven Health Analytics which was paid by Pfizer in connection with the development of this manuscript. The authors report no other conflicts of interest in this work.