Emerging Infectious Diseases (Sep 2020)

Costs Associated with Nontuberculous Mycobacteria Infection, Ontario, Canada, 2001–2012

  • Lauren C. Ramsay,
  • Emily Shing,
  • John Wang,
  • Theodore K. Marras,
  • Jeffrey C. Kwong,
  • Sarah K. Brode,
  • Frances B. Jamieson,
  • Beate Sander

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2609.190524
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 9
pp. 2097 – 2107

Abstract

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To determine incidence-based healthcare costs attributable to nontuberculous mycobacterial (NTM) pulmonary disease (PD) and NTM pulmonary isolation (PI), from the healthcare payer perspective, we conducted a population-based matched cohort study in Ontario, Canada. We established cohorts of patients with incident NTM-PD and NTM-PI during 2001–2012 by using individually linked laboratory data and health administrative data, matched to unexposed persons from the general population. To estimate attributable costs for acute and long-term illness, we used a phase-of-care approach. Costs were stratified by age, sex, and healthcare resource, and reported in 2018 Canadian dollars (CAD) and US dollars (USD), standardized to 10 days. Costs were highest during the before-death phase (NTM-PD CAD $1,352 [USD $1,044]; NTM-PI CAD $731 [USD $565]). The cumulative mean attributable 1-year costs were CAD $14,953 (USD $11,541) for NTM-PD and CAD $8,729 (USD $6,737) for NTM-PI. Costs for patients with NTM-PD and NTM-PI were higher than those for unexposed persons.

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