Open Access
Open access
BMC Medicine, volume 22, issue 1, publication number 46

Substantial health and economic burden of COVID-19 during the year after acute illness among US adults at high risk of severe COVID-19

Amie Scott 1
Wajeeha Ansari 2
Farid Khan 3
Richard Chambers 4
Michael Benigno 1
Manuela Di Fusco 2
Leah McGrath 1
Deepa Malhotra 1
Florin Draica 5
Jennifer Nguyen 3
Joanna Atkinson 6
Jessica E. Atwell 3
Show full list: 12 authors
1
 
Global Real World Evidence, Pfizer Inc, New York, USA
2
 
Global HEOR, Pfizer Inc, New York, USA
3
 
Vaccines Medical Development & Scientific Clinical Affairs, Pfizer Inc, New York, USA
4
 
Global Product Development Statistics, Pfizer Inc, New York, USA
5
 
Medical Affairs, Pfizer Inc, New York, USA
6
 
Medical Affairs, Pfizer Ltd, Tadworth, UK
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2024-02-01
Journal: BMC Medicine
scimago Q1
SJR2.711
CiteScore13.1
Impact factor7
ISSN17417015
General Medicine
Abstract
Background

Post-COVID conditions encompass a range of long-term symptoms after SARS-CoV-2 infection. The potential clinical and economic burden in the United States is unclear. We evaluated diagnoses, medications, healthcare use, and medical costs before and after acute COVID-19 illness in US patients at high risk of severe COVID-19.

Methods

Eligible adults were diagnosed with COVID-19 from April 1 to May 31, 2020, had ≥ 1 condition placing them at risk of severe COVID-19, and were enrolled in Optum’s de-identified Clinformatics® Data Mart Database for ≥ 12 months before and ≥ 13 months after COVID-19 diagnosis. Percentages of diagnoses, medications, resource use, and costs were calculated during baseline (12 months preceding diagnosis) and the post-acute phase (12 months after the 30-day acute phase of COVID-19). Data were stratified by age and COVID-19 severity.

Results

The cohort included 19,558 patients (aged 18–64 y, n = 9381; aged ≥ 65 y, n = 10,177). Compared with baseline, patients during the post-acute phase had increased percentages of blood disorders (16.3%), nervous system disorders (11.1%), and mental and behavioral disorders (7.7%), along with increases in related prescriptions. Overall, there were substantial increases in inpatient and outpatient healthcare utilization, along with a 23.0% increase in medical costs. Changes were greatest among older patients and those admitted to the intensive care unit for acute COVID-19 but were also observed in younger patients and those who did not require COVID-19 hospitalization.

Conclusions

There is a significant clinical and economic burden of post-COVID conditions among US individuals at high risk for severe COVID-19.

Found 
Found 

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