Clinical burden, treatment, and disease control in patients with chronic spontaneous urticaria: Real-world evidence

Annals of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology, 2024

Background

Chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU) is an unpredictable inflammatory skin condition with substantial clinical burden that affects 0.23% to 0.78% of the US population.

Objective

To describe the incidence and prevalence of patients with a record of CSU diagnosis, treatment patterns, disease control, and clinical and economic burden in a US cohort of patients with CSU.

Methods

Adults with a record of CSU diagnosis within the US HealthVerity claims database were eligible. Age- and gender-adjusted prevalence/incidence rates were calculated for January 2017 to December 2022. Clinical characteristics were described during the 1 year before CSU diagnosis (baseline) and the time after (follow-up). Proxy events representing uncontrolled CSU (any record of prescriptions for corticosteroids, biologics, or immunosuppressants [excluding all antihistamines and over-the-counter medication] or any CSU-related inpatient admissions or emergency department or urgent care visits) were used to identify patients with uncontrolled CSU. Health care resource utilization (HCRU) and health care costs were described.

Results

Overall, 200,298 patients were followed-up for a median of 2.3 years after diagnosis. Estimated cumulative prevalence of diagnosed CSU was 0.57% (women: 0.80%; men: 0.32%). The average annual incidence rate was 0.08%. Corticosteroids were the most prescribed treatment during follow-up among the 166,195 patients prescribed at least 1 treatment (94.3%). Proxy events were observed in 59.1% of the patients. HCRU and health care costs increased from baseline in patients with uncontrolled CSU during follow-up.

Conclusion

Of patients with CSU who were prescribed treatment, more than 50% experienced uncontrolled CSU, which was associated with increased HCRU and health care costs.

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Authors

Riedl MA, Patil D, Rodrigues J, Kuruvilla M, Raftery T, Pivneva I, Doran J, Voegel A, Signorovitch J, Yosipovitch G