To estimate the cost of illness in adult patients with moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis (AD) a cohort study was conducted identifying Danish citizens (≥ 18 years) diagnosed with AD between 1997 and 2018 in the Danish National Patient Register. Moderate-to-severe AD was defined as ≥ 3 hospital contacts regarding AD the first year after diagnosis. Each patient with AD was matched to 3 reference individuals through the Central Person Registry. Societal costs included the direct costs for primary-sector visits, inpatient hospitalizations, outpatient contacts, prescription medicine and indirect costs of lost productivity 3 years before and 5 years after the index date (the study period). A total of 5,245 patients with moderate-to-severe AD were identified. The mean attributable healthcare costs for patients with moderate-to-severe AD were EUR 10,835 (
p
< 0.0001) during the study period. Moderate-to-severe AD among adults inferred substantial economic burden compared with a group of matched reference individuals.
This non-interventional, observational, longitudinal study describes treatment patterns of atopic dermatitis (AD) in Sweden. Data from 3 Swedish registries were merged, and data were included in the study for those patients who received an AD diagnosis (during the period 1997 to 2019) and had AD treatment prescribed (during the period 2006 to 2020). Treatment persistence, treatment sequencing, time-to-event analysis, and 12-month prevalence were analysed. Overall, data for 99,885 patients with AD were included, of whom 4,086 (4.1%) received systemic treatments. Median persistence rates were 12.6 (95% CI 11.9, 13.4) months for methotrexate, 10.8 (9.1, 13.0) months for azathioprine, 5.6 (3.8, 6.2) months for mycophenolate, 5.1 (4.4, 5.7) months for alitretinoin and 3.4 (3.2, 3.7) months for cyclosporine. Median (Q1, Q3) time from first secondary care visit for AD to first systemic treatment was 5.8 (2.2, 11.0) years overall and 4.4 (1.3, 9.1) years in the Stockholm region. Methotrexate was a prominent first- and second-line treatment used during the period 2006 to 2020. Dupilumab was introduced during the study period and moved into earlier lines of therapy over time. The 12-month prevalence of AD generally remained steady, with a gradual increase observed over time for the overall population. A steep increase was observed in Stockholm from 2011. This study shows that a small proportion of patients with AD are offered systemic treatments in Sweden, with long periods in secondary care prior to systemic treatments and low persistence on systemic treatments. Regional differences highlight a need for national treatment guidelines.
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