BMC Gastroenterology (May 2019)

Economic burden of moderate to severe irritable bowel syndrome with constipation in six European countries

  • Jan Tack,
  • Vincenzo Stanghellini,
  • Fermín Mearin,
  • Yan Yiannakou,
  • Peter Layer,
  • Benoit Coffin,
  • Magnus Simren,
  • Jonathan Mackinnon,
  • Gwen Wiseman,
  • Anne Marciniak,
  • on behalf of the IBIS-C Study group

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12876-019-0985-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract Background Irritable bowel syndrome with predominant constipation (IBS-C) is a complex disorder with gastrointestinal and nervous system components. The study aim was to assess the economic burden of moderate to severe IBS-C in six European countries (France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Sweden and the UK). Methods An observational, one year retrospective-prospective (6 months each) study of patients diagnosed in the last five years with IBS-C (Rome III criteria) and moderate to severe disease at inclusion (IBS Symptom Severity Scale score ≥ 175). The primary objective was to assess the direct cost to European healthcare systems. Results Five hundred twenty-five patients were included, 60% (range: 43.1–78.8%) suffered from severe IBS-C. During follow-up 11.1–24.0% of patients had a hospitalisation/emergency room (ER) visit, median stay range: 1.5–12.0 days and 41.1–90.4% took prescription drugs for IBS-C. 21.4–50.8% of employed patients took sick leave (mean: 11.6–64.1 days). The mean annual direct cost to the healthcare systems was €937.1- €2108.0. The total direct cost (combined costs to healthcare systems and patient) for IBS-C was €1421.7–€2487.1. Conclusions IBS-C is not a life-threatening condition; however, it has large impact on healthcare systems and society. Direct and indirect costs for moderate to severe IBS-C were high with the largest direct cost driver being hospitalisations/ER visits.

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