Healthcare utilisation and costs in chronic cough

Autor: Cho, Peter SP, Shearer, James, Simpson, Anna, Campbell, Sanchika, Pennington, Mark, Birring, Surinder S
Rok vydání: 2022
Předmět:
DOI: 10.6084/m9.figshare.19619603.v1
Popis: Chronic cough is a common reason for medical consultations, and is associated with considerable physical and psychological morbidity. We investigated healthcare use and cost in chronic cough, and assessed its relationship with cough severity, health status, objective cough frequency (CF) and anxiety and depression. Prospective study of consecutive patients with chronic cough from a specialist clinic who completed a cough severity visual analogue scale (VAS), cough-specific health status (Leicester Cough Questionnaire; LCQ) and general health status EuroQol EQ-5D-5L, Generalised Anxiety Disorder (GAD7) and Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ9) and 24-hour objective CF monitoring with Leicester Cough Monitor (LCM). Case notes were reviewed for cough specific healthcare use 12 months before and after the first cough clinic consultation. Resource use included general practitioner and hospital clinic visits, investigations and treatments. Unit costs for healthcare use were derived predominantly from National Health Service Reference Costs. 100 participants with chronic cough were recruited (69% female, median duration 3 years, mean age 58 years). The diagnoses of cough were unexplained (57%) refractory (27%) and other (16%). Cough severity, health status, and CF were: median (IQR) VAS 59.5 (30-79) mm, mean (SD) LCQ 11.9 (4.0), mean EQ-5D-5L 0.846 (0.178), and geometric mean (SD) CF 15.3 (2.5) coughs⋅hr−1, respectively. The mean (SD) total cost per individual for cough related healthcare utilisation was £1663 (747). Diagnostic investigations were the largest contributor to cost (63%), followed by cough clinic consultations (25%). In multivariate analysis, anxiety (GAD7) and cough related health status (LCQ) were associated with increased cost (p=
Databáze: OpenAIRE