Economic burden of invasive Escherichia coli disease among older adult patients treated in hospitals in the United States

Journal of Managed Care & Specialty Pharmacy, 2023

Background

Although invasive Escherichia coli disease (IED) can lead to severe clinical outcomes, little is known about the associated medical resource use and cost burden of IED in US hospitals.

Objective

To comprehensively describe medical resource use and costs associated with IED during the initial IED event and over the subsequent 12 months.

Methods

Patients aged 60 years or older with 1 or more IED encounters were identified from the PINC AI Healthcare US hospital database (October 1, 2015, to March 31, 2020). The index encounter was defined as the first encounter with a positive E coli culture in a normally sterile site (group 1 IED) or positive E coli culture in urine with signs of sepsis (group 2 IED). Encounters with a positive culture from other bacteria or fungal pathogens were excluded. Outcomes were descriptively reported between admission and discharge for the index encounter and more than 1 - year post-index discharge. Medical resource use and costs included inpatient admissions and outpatient hospital services; costs were reported from a hospital's perspective (ie, charged amount) in 2021 USD.

Results

A total of 19,773 patients were identified (group 1 IED = 51.8%; group 2 IED = 48.2%). Mean age was 76.8 years, 67.4% were female, and 82.1% were White. Most index encounters were community-onset (94.3%) and led to hospitalization (96.5%) (mean inpatient days = 6.9 days). During the 1 - year post-index, 36.8% of patients had 1 or more all-cause hospitalizations. Mean [median] total all-cause hospital costs (as captured through the PINC AI Healthcare database) amounted to $16,760 [$11,340] during the index encounter and $10,942 [$804] during the 1 - year post-index; these costs were higher in the presence of sepsis and multidrug resistance and among hospital-onset IED.

Conclusions

IED is associated with a substantial medical resource use and economic burden both during the initial encounter and over the following year in older adults. This highlights the critical need and potential benefits of preventive measures that may reduce the incidence of IED and associated economic burden.

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Authors

Hernandez-Pastor L, Geurtsen J, Baugh B, El Khoury AC, Kalu N, Krishnarajah G, Gauthier-Loiselle M, Bungay R, Cloutier M, Saade E