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Estimating the Burden of Cost in Chronic Graft-versus-Host Disease: A Human Capital Approach

Journal of Health Economics and Outcomes Research · 4(2):119-126 · 2016
DOI: 10.36469/9815
Christopher A Jones et al.
Christopher A JonesDavid G ChapmanPeter WeimersheimerLuca FernandezOscar Alejandro MesaChristian PetersBart M VanaudenaerdeMitchell C NorotskyRobin Vos

In health economics, costs can be divided into both direct and indirect categories. Direct costs tend to consist of medical costs, which are those directly attributed to health care interventions (e.g., hospitalizations, pharmaceuticals, devices), and non-medical direct costs such as monitoring and professional caregiving. Indirect costs tend to comprise those related to lost productivity due to illness (or treatment), burden on systems outside of the healthcare domain, and other costs that can sometimes outweigh the entire sum of direct healthcare costs. The most common life-threatening complication of lung and hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation (HSCT) is bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome (BOS). BOS is currently diagnosed as a 20% decline in the forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1) from the best (baseline) post-transplantation value, and is a major cause of morbidity and mortality amongst lung and stem cell transplant patients. BOS affects half of all lung transplant patients within the first 5 years post-transplant, rising to the majority of patients (~80%) within the first decade following transplant. We estimated both direct and indirect costs for the first 10 years following BOS diagnosis, a viewpoint that highlights a tremendous imbalance between healthcare and non-healthcare costs. The lost workforce resulting from BOS-related infirmity will cost society more than $3.7 Billion over the next decade, a figure that is more than double the estimated 10-year cost of treating BOS ($1.4B), including diagnostics, immunosuppressives, and additional complications. As such, BOS is estimated to present a burden of cost that must be evaluated in a new light to include the wider societal perspective.

Aimwell Signal Relevance AIMWELL EDITORIAL

This publication published in Journal of Health Economics and Outcomes Research represents peer-reviewed research in Transplant Medicine / Hematology directly relevant to Aimwell’s evidence intelligence infrastructure. It contributes to the FHIN network’s knowledge base on Transplant Medicine / Hematology and supports data-driven clinical decision making for Aimwell member organizations.

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Published2016

Source attribution: PubMed / NCBI · CrossRef

Retrieved: May 21, 2026

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