Awarded/Presented
Tags
Bleeding Disorders Conference
Orthopedic and Physical Therapy
Researchers
Dana Stafkey-Mailey, Joan Gill, Jennifer Pocoski, Michael Eaddy, Abhijit Gadkari

Objective:

To evaluate changes in healthcare resource utilization and haemophilia related events among patients diagnosed with haemophilia A between 2008 and 2012.

Methods:

This retrospective study analyzed data from the Humedica de-identified electronic medical record database between January 2008 and December 2012. Male patients diagnosed with hemophilia A (ICD-9-CM 286.0) receiving treatment with a clotting factor were eligible if they 1) were ≥18 years of age 2) did not receive Factor IX therapy and 3) did not have a diagnosis of Von Willebrand while receiving factor VIII therapy containing von Willebrand factor. All patient level resource utilization was converted to utilization per patient year. Resource utilization was then compared across time periods using repeated measures analysis of variance (ANOVA). The annualized number of haemophilia related events (haemophilic arthropathy or other joint related events) was calculated for each year. McNemar’s chi-square test was used to compare the frequencies across years.

Summary:

136 patients contributing 375 patient-years were included in this study. Office/clinic visits accounted for the majority of healthcare encounters annually; 7.5 all-cause visits per year and 2.2 haemophilia related visits per year. The number of annual all-cause office/clinic visits for Haemophilia A patients decreased significantly over time from 12.5 visits in 2008 to 5.9 visits in 2012 (p=0.0404), while haemophilia A-specific annual visits decreased from 4.0 to 1.5 (p=0.1991) during the same period. On average haemophilia A patients had less than 1 inpatient and emergency room visits per year, which did not change significantly over time (p=0.6371 and p=0.4845, respectively). Over the 5-year period, haemophilic events occurred in 30.93% of patient years, changed from 23.81% in 2009 to 34.09% in 2011 (p=0.6658).

Conclusions:

Office/clinic outpatient visits among patients diagnosed with haemophilia A has decreased overtime. However, the rate of haemophilia related arthropathies and other associated events have remained high. Further analysis is needed to understand how to best manage patients diagnosed with haemophilia A and reduce the proportion of patients who develop reduced joint mobility due to bleeding into joints.