Costs of Early Stage Alzheimer’s Disease in the United States: Cross-Sectional Analysis of a Prospective Cohort Study (GERAS-US)1

R.L. Robinson(Eli Lilly (United States)), Dorene M. Rentz(Brigham and Women's Hospital), J. Scott Andrews(Eli Lilly (United States)), Anthony J. Zagar(Eli Lilly (United States)), Yongin Kim(Eli Lilly (United States)), Valerie Bruemmer(Eli Lilly (United States)), Ronald L. Schwartz(Hattiesburg Clinic), Wenyu Ye(Eli Lilly (United States)), Howard Fillit(Alzheimer's Drug Discovery Foundation)
Journal of Alzheimer s Disease
March 31, 2020
Cited by 69Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Costs associated with early stages of Alzheimer's disease (AD; mild cognitive impairment [MCI] and mild dementia [MILD]) are understudied. OBJECTIVE: To compare costs associated with MCI and MILD due to AD in the United States. METHODS: Data included baseline patient/study partner medical history, healthcare resource utilization, and outcome assessments as part of a prospective cohort study. Direct, indirect, and total societal costs were derived by applying standardized unit costs to resources for the 1-month pre-baseline period (USD2017). Costs/month for MCI and MILD cohorts were compared using analysis of variance models. To strengthen the confidence of diagnosis, amyloid-β (Aβ) tests were included and analyses were replicated stratifying within each cohort by amyloid status [+ /-]. RESULTS: Patients (N = 1327) with MILD versus MCI had higher total societal costs/month ($4243 versus $2816; p < 0.001). These costs were not significantly different within each severity cohort by amyloid status. The largest fraction of overall costs were informal caregiver costs (45.1%) for the MILD cohort, whereas direct medical patient costs were the largest for the MCI cohort (39.0%). Correspondingly, caregiver time spent on basic activities of daily living (ADLs), instrumental ADLs, and supervision time was twice as high for MILD versus MCI (all p < 0.001). CONCLUSION: Early AD poses a financial burden, and despite higher functioning among those with MCI, caregivers were significantly impacted. The major cost driver was the patient's clinical cognitive-functional status and not amyloid status. Differences were primarily due to rising need for caregiver support.


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