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Indirect costs in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: A review of the economic burden on employers and individuals in the United States

Authors Patel J, Nagar S, Dalal A

Received 7 November 2013

Accepted for publication 3 February 2014

Published 19 March 2014 Volume 2014:9(1) Pages 289—300

DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/COPD.S57157

Checked for plagiarism Yes

Review by Single anonymous peer review

Peer reviewer comments 4



Jeetvan G Patel,1,2 Saurabh P Nagar,2 Anand A Dalal2

1Pharmacy Administration and Public Health, University of Houston, Houston, TX, 2US Health Outcomes, GlaxoSmithKline, Durham, NC, USA

Objective: To review and summarize existing literature on the indirect burden of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) in the US.
Methods: Medline, Scopus, and OvidSP databases were searched using defined search terms to identify relevant studies. Eligible studies were published in English between January 2000 and April 2012 and calculated the indirect burden of COPD in a US population in terms of prevalence, incidence or costs of productivity loss, disability, morbidity, or mortality.
Results: Of 53 studies identified, eleven met eligibility criteria, with data years spanning 1987–2009. Estimates of workforce participation range from 56% to 69% among individuals with COPD and from 65% to 77% among individuals without COPD. Approximately 13%–18% of those with COPD are limited in the amount or type of work they can do and one-third or more experience general activity limitation. Estimates of restricted activity days range from 27–63 days per year. Estimates of mean annual sick leave and/or disability days among employed individuals with COPD range from 1.3–19.4 days. Estimates of bed confinement range from 13–32 days per year. Estimated mean annual indirect costs were $893–$2,234/person (US dollars) with COPD ($1,521–$3,348 in 2010 [US dollars]) and varied with the population studied, specific cost outcomes, and economic inputs. In studies that assessed total (direct and indirect) costs, indirect costs accounted for 27%–61% of total costs, depending on the population studied.
Conclusions: COPD is associated with substantial indirect costs. The disease places a burden on employers in terms of lost productivity and associated costs and on individuals in terms of lost income related to absenteeism, activity limitation, and disability. Consideration of indirect as well as direct costs is necessary to gain a more complete view of the societal burden of COPD.

Keywords: chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, disability, economics, indirect costs, productivity

Introduction

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a costly chronic disease that affects 26.8 million Americans, of whom an estimated 12 million are undiagnosed.1 Together with asthma, it is the third leading cause of death in the US.2 According to the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute (NHLBI), the costs of COPD and asthma totaled $68.0 billion (US dollars [USD]) in 2008, of which $53.7 billion USD were direct costs.1 Direct costs include costs for inpatient care, physician services, prescription drugs, home health care and nursing home care. Exacerbations of COPD account for 45%–75% of these direct health care expenditures, as they frequently lead to physician and emergency department visits, additional medication use, and costly hospital stays.3 Serious exacerbations can be especially costly: in one US study, the cost of a COPD hospitalization in 2008 ranged from $7,242 USD for a standard COPD admission to $44,909 USD for a hospitalization involving intubation and intensive care.4

The true burden of a disease on individuals and society is not reflected by direct costs alone, however. Indirect costs account for a substantial proportion of a disease’s burden. Indirect costs are primarily related to labor force participation, including lost wages of the individual, lost wages of family caregivers, and employer-borne costs such as absenteeism and sick leave, disability, and impaired work performance (presenteeism) costs.5 Examples of other indirect costs are the costs of a hired caregiver, transportation costs, and costs associated with modifications to residences.5 Outcomes, such as activity limitation, restricted activity days, and bed days, are additional measures of a disease’s indirect burden. According to NHLBI, the indirect costs of COPD- and asthma-related premature mortality (ie, productivity costs) totaled $14.8 billion USD in 2008.1 On top of this sum is an estimated $8 billion USD per year in indirect costs related to morbidity.6

The indirect costs of COPD have been examined from a number of angles using a variety of data sources and outcome measures. This heterogeneity of study designs, methods, and outcome measures does not permit a systematic review or meta-analysis of data that could produce definitive cost estimates. Therefore, the aim of this non-systematic review is to synthesize and summarize the existing data in order to provide an overview of the indirect costs associated with COPD.

Methods

To identify relevant published studies, searches were conducted using MEDLINE®/PubMed®, Scopus, and OvidSP databases. The search terms used were: indirect cost, productivity loss, work loss, occupational COPD, socioeconomic cost, societal cost, workforce loss, and economic burden. These terms were used in conjunction with the aforementioned terms: chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, obstructive lung disease, emphysema, and bronchitis and/or chronic bronchitis. The references cited in articles identified from the initial search were also reviewed to identify additional potentially eligible studies.

Eligible studies met the following criteria: 1) performed an original analysis of data; 2) stated the indirect burden of COPD in the US in terms of productivity, disability, costs due to morbidity or mortality, and/or lost earnings; 3) were published from January 2000 to April 2012; and 4) were published in the English language. Editorials, letters, commentary, and review articles were excluded. Original research publications were excluded if they lacked a detailed description of how COPD patients were identified for the study. Studies reporting either per-patient or national population estimates of the indirect burden of COPD were included in the review. Where estimates were stratified by COPD subtype (eg, emphysema and chronic bronchitis) or severity (eg, mild, moderate, severe) results are reported accordingly. Where appropriate, aggregate costs were converted into person-level estimates to permit comparisons across studies. Cost estimates for years prior to 2010 were inflated to 2010 USD using the annual average of the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U; US Bureau of Labor).7 When the original study provided costs for a range of years, the final year in the range was used as the starting point for inflation adjustment.

Results

The initial search strategy produced 53 published studies of the indirect burden of COPD. After excluding 32 studies that did not meet the inclusion criteria and ten studies that met exclusion criteria, eleven studies remained within the scope of the review (Figure 1).5,817 Of these studies, eight were survey-based and three were retrospective analyses using claims data. The outcomes examined in these studies included, but were not limited to, prevalence of workforce participation, annual days of absenteeism and presenteeism, activity limitation, bed days, short-term and long-term disability, and the associated costs to the individual, employer, and/or society. Data used in these studies spanned the years 1987–2009. The studies and their characteristics are summarized in Table 1.

Figure 1 Study attrition diagram.
Abbreviation: COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

Table 1 Studies included in the review
Notes: aSee Tables 2, 3, and 4. for more specific outcome measures; bCOPD due to occupational exposure to harmful substances, such as dust and gases.
Abbreviations: COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; NHANES III, National Health and Examination Survey III; NHIS, National Health Interview Survey; SIPP, Survey of Income and Program Participation (US Census Bureau).

Workforce participation

Of the four studies that estimated workforce participation among individuals with COPD, one stratified estimates by sex and COPD type (emphysema or chronic bronchitis),8 one by comorbid asthma status,9 and one used disease severity to statistically model the impact of COPD on workforce participation (Table 2).10 Self-report survey data were used for all four studies.

Table 2 Proportion of individuals with COPD reporting productivity impairment: ability to work, work and activity limitations, and disability
Notes: aIn a logistic regression model that adjusted for age, sex, education, smoking status and other variables, having mild, moderate or severe COPD was associated with a 3.4%, 3.9%, and 14.4% reduction in the workforce participation rate, respectively (P<0.001 for linear trend); bthe study publication presents results as the proportion of the sample unable to work/not working as follows: 18.4% (chronic bronchitis), 62.9% (emphysema), 35% (chronic bronchitis or emphysema). We have subtracted these proportions from 1 to report the inverse value (proportion able to work/working) in order to facilitate comparison across studies; cValues for the combined chronic bronchitis and emphysema groups were calculated by the authors using data provided in the publication.
Abbreviation: COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

Using data from the 1988–1994 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) III (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, US Department of Health and Human Services, Hyattsville, MD, USA), Sin et al determined the adjusted relationship between COPD and workforce participation.10 The sample included 12,436 participants aged 18–65, of whom 1,073 had COPD and 11,363 did not. Of the individuals with COPD, 69.21% reported labor force participation, compared to 77.24% of those without COPD (P=0.001). Airflow obstruction in all participants was measured by spirometry. Using a Probit procedure that adjusted for age, sex, education, smoking status, and other variables, the researchers estimated that having mild, moderate, or severe COPD is associated with a 3.4%, 3.9%, and 14.4% reduction in the workforce participation rate, respectively (P<0.001 for linear trend), and demonstrated that ability to work decreases as disease severity increases; this inverse relationship is particularly pronounced for severe COPD. Altogether, participants with COPD of any severity were 3.9% less likely to be working than individuals without COPD (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.3%–6.4%; P=0.0032). This study reported an 18.2% higher workforce participation for men (with or without COPD) than women (95% CI, 16.7–19.7; P=0.001).

In an analysis of combined data from the 1993 and 1994 National Health Interview Survey (NHIS), a nationally representative survey of 40,000–50,000 households per year, Ward et al found that 1.5% of 107,710 adults age ≥25 years reported having chronic bronchitis (n=1,582) and 0.9% (n=947) reported having emphysema.8 Among participants with chronic bronchitis, 18.4% said they were unable to work. However, among participants with emphysema, a much higher percentage (62.9%) reported being unable to work. By combining the chronic bronchitis and emphysema groups (n=2,529), we estimate that approximately 35% of participants with any type of COPD were unable to work. This workforce participation rate for the combined groups of 65% is similar to the estimate of 69.21% obtained by Sin et al based on NHANES III data.10 Data reported by Ward et al also show that males with chronic bronchitis or emphysema had a 4.2% and 2.5% point higher rate of inability to work, respectively, than did females.8 In the 1996 NHIS, 5.9% of adults age ≥25 years reported having COPD.9 Mannino’s age-adjusted estimates indicated that 54% of participants with both COPD and asthma and 56% of those with COPD alone were working, compared to 65% of participants with no COPD or asthma.

The inability to work that is attributable to COPD (rather than to any cause) was examined in two studies, both of which used self-report survey data. Halpern et al evaluated data from the US sample of the multi-country Confronting COPD survey, a telephone survey of individuals with COPD conducted in 2000.11 The age of the 447 US respondents ranged from 42 to 89 years with a mean of 64 years; 40% had mild disease, 52% moderate disease, and 7% severe disease. A total of 34% reported being unable to work because of COPD.

The NHIS analysis by Ward et al presents the percentages of individuals with COPD with “inability to work attributable to respiratory conditions” separately from the “inability to work” figures cited above and reported values of 0.6% and 27.4% for the chronic bronchitis and emphysema groups, respectively.8 In our calculation, if the chronic bronchitis and emphysema groups are combined, the percentage of participants with inability to work attributable to respiratory conditions is approximately 14%, a much lower figure than that derived by Halpern et al from the Confronting COPD survey.11 Mannino et al and Sin et al present the percentage of participants with and without COPD who were working, but for those not working, the cause of that status is not provided.9,10 Additional research is needed to clarify this aspect of the indirect burden of COPD.

Although the survey questions and workforce participation outcomes reported in these studies may not be strictly equivalent, taken together, the data suggest that the prevalence of workforce participation among individuals with COPD is approximately 56%–69%, compared to 65%–77% of individuals without COPD. These estimates are similar to the finding of a study of clinic patients with COPD, which found that 60% were able to work.18 Emphysema, more severe disease, and possibly comorbid asthma are more likely to be associated with inability to work than are chronic bronchitis or mild disease.

Work limitations

Data from two studies that used self-report survey data indicate that approximately 13%–18% of working individuals with COPD experience limitations regarding their work (Table 2).8,11 In Ward et al’s analysis of 1993–1994 NHIS data, 11.6% of participants with chronic bronchitis and 16.3% of those with emphysema reported they were limited in the kind or amount of work they could perform.8 By combining both groups using group numbers provided in the publication, we estimate that 13% of all survey participants with COPD had work limitations. A total of 3.4% of individuals with chronic bronchitis and 43.5% of those with emphysema attributed their work limitations to their condition. In Halpern et al’s review of the US sample of the Confronting COPD survey, 18% of respondents reported they were “limited in their ability to work normally”.11

Absenteeism and presenteeism

Estimates of absenteeism in employed individuals with COPD vary from 1.3 to 19.4 days per year across seven studies (Table 3).5,8,9,1114 This wide variation is due in part to the fact that some studies report total days of absenteeism (due to any cause) and others report excess absenteeism due to COPD alone. In addition, at least one study included vacation days in its absenteeism estimates, whereas other studies included only sick days and disability days. In some cases, the definition of absenteeism or work loss days is unclear.

Table 3 Days per year: work loss, disability, and bed confinement in persons with COPD
Notes: aExcept as otherwise noted; bincludes vacation days; cvalue represents excess days due to COPD.
Abbreviation: COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

Using data from the 1987 National Medical Expenditure Survey (NMES), a survey of 14,000 households and about 35,000 individuals, Strassels et al found that among 238 individuals age ≥40 years with COPD, the number of mean lost workdays per year was 3.6 (95% CI, 1.4–5.8), of which 38% were COPD-related (1 day, 95% CI <0.1–2.0).13 This survey oversamples for low-income families, black and Hispanic individuals, the elderly and functionally impaired persons, as its primary purpose is to inform health care policy decisions.

In Ward et al’s study of 1993–1994 NHIS data, less than 5% of participants with COPD reported any work loss days in the past two weeks and work loss averaged 1.5 days per year for chronic bronchitis and 1.3 days per year for emphysema.8 Mannino et al analyzed 1996 NHIS data and reported an average annual work loss of 8.2 days for participants with COPD and asthma and 2.4 days for those with COPD alone, compared to 2.9 days for those with neither COPD nor asthma.9

In a study of employed adults age 65 and older, self-reported absenteeism during the past seven days was 0.75 hours among adults without COPD (n=3,061) but 1.08 hours among adults with COPD (n=297), which is roughly equivalent to 7 days per year if one assumes absenteeism rates are constant throughout the year.12 After adjustment for demographic and health history variables, however, the difference in absenteeism between those with and without COPD was not statistically significant.

In the Confronting COPD Survey, 6% of 447 US respondents of working age reported in 2000 that they had missed work due to COPD over the last 12 months, and absenteeism averaged 18.7 days.11 To assess the impact of chronic health conditions on work performance, Wang et al administered the World Health Organization’s Health and Work Performance Questionnaire (WHO-HPQ) by telephone to four populations of workers age 18 years and older (n=2,350).5 Among the 1.7% of participants with COPD, excess absenteeism due to COPD averaged 19.4 days (standard error 8.9), excess presenteeism (lost productivity due to underperformance while at work) averaged 27.5 days (standard error 15.6), and excess absenteeism and presenteeism combined averaged 42.9 days (standard error 17.0) annually. Although the standard error for these values is large due to small sample size, these effect sizes were larger for COPD than for the other 12 chronic conditions evaluated. Having COPD was a significant predictor of absenteeism, but not presenteeism. Absenteeism included all time away from work, including vacation, sick leave, and disability, which may explain the high number of work loss days compared to other studies of COPD-related work loss. Taken together, these seven studies yield fairly disparate estimates of work loss in persons with COPD.

Family caregivers

Spouses and other family members may provide care for individuals with COPD and, if employed, may sometimes miss work in order to do this. These are additional work loss costs. One study examined work loss among family caregivers based on self-report survey data.11 A total of 7% of participants with COPD reported some work loss for a family member, with an average work loss of 1.7 days per family caregiver per year.

Activity limitation, bed confinement, and disability

Five studies looked at COPD-related activity limitation, bed confinement days, short-term disability or long-term disability. Prevalence estimates for these conditions are shown in Table 2 and estimates of annual days are shown in Table 3.

Activity limitation

In the 1997 NHIS, 32% of individuals with COPD alone and 45% of individuals with COPD and asthma reported some activity limitation.9 The COPD group experienced a mean of 31.0 restricted activity days annually and the COPD + asthma group experienced 62.5 restricted activity days. The NMES analysis by Strassels et al of 228 individuals with COPD found that out of 27.5 mean total restricted activity days, 58% (15.9 days, 95%CI 10.3–21.5) were COPD-related.13 Using National Health and Wellness Survey data, DiBonaventura reported that 29.9% of those with COPD had some activity limitation, compared to 13.9% of those without COPD.12

Bed days

Two studies reported annual days of bed confinement. In Mannino et al’s analysis of 1996 NHIS data, individuals with COPD alone reported 13.1 bed days and those with COPD + asthma reported 31.5 bed days per year.9 These figures are of a similar magnitude to those reported by Strassels et al based on 1987 NMES data.13 He found that respondents with COPD had 24.4 (95%CI, 20.5–34.4) total bed days; however, only 16.1 bed days (95%CI, 10.3–21.8) were COPD-related. Thus, estimates of bed confinement range from about 13 to 32 days per year for people with COPD and the number of excess bed days due to the disease itself may be somewhat or considerably less.

Disability prevalence and related work loss

Using a health care claims and disability database with data for nine multi-state companies employing 550,000 individuals (age 40–63 years), Darkow et al estimated the rate and duration of short-term and long-term disability.15 They identified 1,349 employees (mean age, 52 years) with a primary diagnosis of COPD based on healthcare claims in 2001–2004 and matched them to 2,696 controls without COPD. A total of 21.8% of employees with COPD had a short-term disability claim for any cause compared to 7.0% of controls, and 2.4% had a long-term disability claim for any cause compared to 0.4% of controls. In an analysis that adjusted for length of follow-up and comorbidities not related to COPD, employees with COPD were twice as likely to have a short-term disability claim (odds ratio [OR] 2.11, 95%CI 1.64–2.71) and more than four times as likely to have a long-term disability claim (OR 4.21, 95%CI 1.93–9.16) as controls. In an adjusted analysis, cases had 54.8 (95%CI 49.5–60.1) short-term disability days versus 39.1 (95%CI 32.5–45.7) for controls and 76.4 (95%CI 56.4–96.4) long-term disability days versus 85.9 (95%CI 48.7–123.1) for controls.

In a study based on claims data for employees age 18 to 65 years, of whom 2.9% had COPD, a mean of 5.6 absence hours and 1.0 short-term disability hours per month occurred in employees with COPD and 3.8 absence hours and 0.6 short-term disability days occurred in the comparison group.14

Costs of COPD-related productivity loss, activity limitation, and disability

The indirect costs of COPD have been estimated in terms of productivity losses stemming from absenteeism and disability. These have been calculated using wage, fringe benefits, short-term and long-term disability payments, and other cost inputs. Our search strategy identified six studies that calculated these indirect costs of COPD. Per-person cost estimates are shown in Table 4. Both the costs presented in each publication for the relevant study year and those same costs inflated to 2010 USD are presented. Costs for the US population are shown in Table 5.

Table 4 Costs associated with the indirect burden of COPD
Notes: aInflated using medical care component of the Consumer Price Index; bcalculated by authors using data provided in publication; cdenominator is all employees. COPD prevalence in this employed population was 3.5%.
Abbreviations: COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; USD, US dollars.

Table 5 Estimates of the annual indirect costs of COPD in the US
Notes: aStudy values were inflated to USD 2010 value using medical care component of the Consumer Price Index; blost productivity related to home tasks such as child care, home repair, meal preparation, etc; cincluded for comparative purposes.
Abbreviations: COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; NHLBI, National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute; USD, US dollars.

Using the 3.9% reduction in the work participation rate among people with COPD and the population weights derived from NHANES III data, Sin et al estimated that among a total COPD population of ~9.4 million persons in 1994, there was excess unemployment of 366,600 persons (due to COPD), which represents a productivity loss of $9.9 billion USD per year (366,600 × $27,193, where $27,193 is the average US wage plus fringe benefits [US Department of Labor]).10 Distributing this cost across the entire 1994 US COPD population yields a mean lost productivity cost of $1,053 USD per person with COPD ($9.9 billion ÷ 9.4 million persons).

Leigh et al estimated the 1996 indirect mortality and morbidity costs of occupational COPD based on the assumption that COPD due to work exposures represents 15% of all COPD cases (15% is the population attributable risk [PAR]).16 National Center for Health Statistics life-table estimates and US Bureau of Labor Statistics labor force participation data were used to estimate the per-person mean cost of wages, fringe benefits and home production for years of life lost due to early death. These same inputs were used to estimate indirect morbidity costs for persons who were partially or fully disabled due to occupational COPD. For both estimates, per-person costs were multiplied by the estimated US prevalence of occupational COPD (in 1996, there were an estimated 14,150,000 persons with chronic bronchitis and 1,821,000 persons with emphysema, which summed and multiplied by 15% yielded an estimated 2,395,650 persons with occupational COPD). Lost earnings, fringe benefits and home production costs totaled $0.8793 billion USD for mortality and $1.2607 billion USD for morbidity, for an estimated total indirect cost of $2.14 billion USD for occupational COPD in 1996. Although Leigh et al do not provide per-person costs, dividing the national prevalence of occupational COPD used in the study by the total population costs they calculated produces an estimated annual per-person indirect cost of $893 USD for mortality and morbidity combined ($367 USD for mortality plus $526 USD for morbidity).

Halpern et al estimated the mean annual productivity cost to be $1,527 USD per person with COPD (in 2000) based on work loss figures from the Confronting COPD survey. The estimate was based on a mean of 18.7 lost work days for the 25 individuals who reported work loss and a cost per day of $100.55 USD (for employees age 45 years to retirement).11

In the retrospective case-control study of employed individuals with COPD described above, Darkow et al calculated disability costs for persons with COPD using data from January 1, 2001 to March 31, 2004.15 Total lost work days due to short-term and long-term disability (adjusted for length of follow-up) were multiplied by that employee’s daily wage. Mean annualized disability costs, adjusted for length of follow-up (which ranged from 90 to 365 days) were $9,815 USD (95%CI $83,84–$11,246) for employees with COPD who had disability claims (22.8%, n=307) and $6,335 (95%CI $4,541–$8,130) for employees without COPD who had disability claims (7.3%, n=197). By dividing total disability costs (307 cases × $9,815 USD) by the total number of employees with COPD (both with and without disability claims; n=1,349), we arrive at a mean cost of $2,234 USD per employee with COPD, compared to $463 USD per employee without COPD (n=2,696). Thus, we roughly estimate the excess cost of disability for COPD in this employed population to be $1,771 USD per year.

Data for 374,799 employees of six large employers, derived from the MEDSTAT Group’s MarketScan HPM database, were used to evaluate the indirect costs of COPD and other physical and mental health conditions in 1999.17 Costs for absenteeism were calculated by multiplying the hours absent by $30.00 USD (representing hourly wages and fringe benefits).

Goetzel points out that even the $23.15/hour USD rate (average wages plus benefits) produced by the US Bureau of Labor statistics is likely to undervalue labor time, because it considers only wages and fringe benefits. Employers engender additional costs, however, including the cost of over-staffing to compensate for absenteeism and costs related to the “spillover effect”, which is the impact on the productivity of a team that occurs when one member is absent. The mean annual absence payment per employee with COPD was $22.62 USD and the mean short-term disability payment, based on claim amounts, was $5.21 USD (for claims with missing costs, the cost per day was imputed based on 60% of $144 USD, the estimated value of a day of work), yielding a total mean cost of $27.83 USD. Similar outcomes reported by Nair et al included mean annual absence payments of $55 USD (COPD-related absences) and $1,104 USD (all-cause absences) among individuals with COPD compared to $0 USD and $742 USD among individuals without COPD.14 The adjusted difference in all-cause absence payments was $155 USD. All-cause short-term disability payments ($1,608 USD for employees with COPD; $981 USD for employees without COPD) yielded an adjusted difference of $754 USD.

Indirect costs as a percentage of total costs

In the study of productivity costs in employed adults by Goetzel et al, absence and disability costs in persons with COPD accounted for 43% of the employer’s total health and productivity costs.17 Leigh et al report a similar rate in adults age 35 and older (employed and unemployed), with indirect costs accounting for 44% of total costs in persons with occupational COPD.16 The study by Nair et al of employed adults, which used both commercial claims and large employer productivity databases, reported that indirect costs represented 61% of total COPD-related costs.14 In contrast, in the Confronting COPD Survey, work loss accounted for 27% of total costs in adults age 45 and older.11 This lower percentage may be attributable to the sample population, which including both working age and older adults; older adults would not be expected to contribute as much to work-related categories of indirect costs, such as absenteeism and disability claims. According to NHLBI, which estimated direct, premature mortality, and morbidity costs based on data from various national surveys, the projected proportion of indirect costs for COPD in 2010 was 41%.6

Key results summary

  • Estimates of the prevalence of workforce participation among individuals with COPD ranged from 56% to 69%, compared to 65% to 77% among individuals without COPD.
  • Among employed individuals with COPD, absenteeism ranged from 1.3–19.4 days (higher estimates included vacation/annual leave days in addition to sick leave and/or disability days).
  • Approximately 13% to 18% of persons with COPD reported they were limited in the amount or type of work they could do. One-third or more of individuals with COPD reported general activity limitation. Individuals with COPD who have emphysema (rather than chronic bronchitis) or comorbid asthma were more likely to experience activity limitation. Estimates of restricted activity days ranged from 27.5 to 62.5 days per year. The number of bed confinement days ranged from 13 to 32 days per year.
  • Estimated mean annual indirect costs ranged from $893 to $2,234 USD/person with COPD in 1994–2004 dollars, or $1,521 to $3,348 USD per person in 2010 dollars, with estimates varying based on the population studied, specific cost outcomes calculated and the economic inputs used.
  • Indirect costs accounted for 27% to 61% of total costs, with the higher estimates produced by studies of working age populations.6

Discussion

Based on national survey data, the costs of COPD in the United States have been estimated to be $49.9 billion USD per year, with indirect costs accounting for approximately 41% of total costs.1,6 In this review, we summarized studies that examined various components of indirect costs. The findings of reduced workforce participation, increased absenteeism and disability, and activity limitations among persons with COPD are not surprising and probably reflect the symptomatic component of COPD, which includes fatigue, exertion dyspnea, chronic cough, and wheeze, and more frequent respiratory infections. In addition, periodic acute exacerbations of COPD often require treatment on an outpatient or inpatient basis, necessitating absence from work. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease is a progressive disease, and as Sin et al have shown, labor force participation decreases as disease severity increases.10 Although only one study examined outcomes by COPD subtype, it found that productivity losses were substantially higher for individuals with emphysema than for individuals with chronic bronchitis.8

Although estimates of productivity losses associated with COPD varied, it is clear that COPD has a significant impact on individuals and employers in terms of work loss, disability, activity limitation, and bed confinement days, and this impact results in a substantial indirect cost burden.

It also should be noted that comorbidities contribute to the total burden of COPD, since this systemic disease has serious adverse effects that go well beyond the lungs. Many individuals with COPD have asthma, cardiovascular disease, hypercholesterolemia, hypertension, depression, cataracts, osteoporosis, and/or diabetes.19 Studies have shown that co-morbid depression and cardiovascular disease have a substantial impact on the direct costs of COPD.20,21 It is likely that these and other comorbidities contribute to the indirect costs of COPD as well.

Can the indirect burden of COPD be reduced? Good disease management can improve quality of life and decrease resource use and costs.2224 Pharmacotherapy, smoking cessation, pulmonary rehabilitation, and certain surgical procedures have been shown to alter disease progression.25 Thus, initiation of appropriate medication therapy, smoking cessation support, and referral to pulmonary rehabilitation programs in the clinic setting could lead to improved work productivity. In the workplace setting itself, smoking cessation programs are one strategy that can be readily implemented by employers. Coordination of efforts by employers and health care providers might further improve COPD management and reduce the disease’s impact on individuals, families, and employers.

Limitations

The studies we reviewed assessed indirect costs from the US perspective and cannot be generalized to other countries, which have different health care systems (including different insurance systems), productivity impacts and measurement methods, and workplace illness policies and benefits. Several studies in this review used data sources that identified individuals with COPD based on self-report. Because nearly half of individuals with COPD, especially those with mild symptoms, are undiagnosed, data based on self-report may underestimate COPD prevalence and hence the estimates of disease burden and cost, as is suggested by the results of the Confronting COPD Survey.15 In interpreting findings, it must be kept in mind that the percentage of total costs attributable to indirect costs is likely to be higher in working age compared to older populations, since the majority of indirect costs are derived from measures of productivity loss. In addition, as COPD is a progressive disease, direct medical costs may be relatively higher and indirect costs relatively lower in older age groups. Thus, the indirect burden of COPD (both the per capita and total population burden) identified in a single study must be viewed in the context of the population sample studied and the findings may not reflect the burden in the entire COPD population.

Research needs

To obtain a complete picture of the societal impact of a chronic condition, indirect costs have to be considered along with the more easily quantified direct costs. Limited data sources are available for measuring indirect costs at a population level, and estimates of indirect costs in COPD have not been as consistent as have estimates of direct costs. This is due in part to differences in measures that capture worker productivity, absenteeism, presenteeism, short-term disability, and worker compensation across various populations. Survey methods also have inherent biases, such as responder bias and recall bias. In addition, productivity measured in wage-earning industries has a different complexion than productivity among salaried workers, making the measurement and attribution of indirect costs to a particular disease or condition more difficult. It is challenging to calculate the true burden of the disease on a population level because of this imperfectly-captured data. Therefore, productivity and other indirect costs may be underreported and/or underestimated in many cases.

In addition to methodological and logistical issues that may result in inadequate capture of indirect cost data, other research gaps are evident in the literature. The majority of indirect cost analyses are based on data from the 1980s and 1990s, and analyses using more recent data are needed. The management of COPD has improved in the last decade, particularly in terms of pharmacotherapy management, new classes of medications, and the use of evidence-based clinical guidelines. Analysis of more recent data may show that these changes have had a positive impact on productivity losses. Health services and outcomes research methods also have evolved considerably over the years with the development of more effective approaches to data collection, management of confounding biases, and calculation of indirect costs. Some large employers have now started systematic collection and reporting of employee productivity claims.

Currently, little is known about the burden of COPD on families or caregivers. Leigh et al have pointed out that these costs may be difficult to estimate, but based on prior research about “informal” caregiving, they are probably large.16 Nationally representative surveys employing complex sampling weights have been developed which report the productivity burden of the caregiver as well as the patient.

Incremental indirect costs associated with COPD need to be evaluated, especially among low-risk patients who are not experiencing frequent COPD exacerbations. These patients would be expected to be relatively younger and more likely to be in the workforce than higher-risk patients with more frequent exacerbations, thus having a higher productivity loss burden.26

In order to develop estimates that are more interpretable and meaningful, studies employing a matched control group of patients with similar disease severity could be employed. In the current literature, only a few studies identifying COPD-related productivity loss or indirect costs used a control group of individuals without COPD.10,14,15 Analyses that stratify indirect costs by disease severity and exacerbation frequency would also help clarify the indirect costs that are specifically attributable to COPD.

Finally, interventions that might impact indirect costs, such as coordinated efforts between health care providers and large employers to improve COPD management, are largely unstudied. For example, productivity may be impacted by shortness of breath and other COPD symptoms, but there have been no studies of the impact of optimal COPD pharmacotherapy on worker productivity. Several pharmacotherapies improve exercise capacity in COPD, and research that explores this relationship from a work productivity standpoint would help identify strategies for managing the indirect cost burden of COPD.27

Conclusion

The indirect costs of COPD are substantial and the total national burden may be underestimated, in part due to the large proportion of individuals with undiagnosed COPD. Indirect costs impose a burden on employers in terms of productivity losses, absenteeism, impaired work performance, and disability claims and on individuals in terms of lost income and work and activity limitations, all of which lead to lower quality of life. Further studies are needed to assess the indirect burden of COPD, including analyses that use more recent data, take into account disease severity, and determine the burden of COPD on family caregivers. Finally, disease-specific interventions to manage the productivity loss associated with COPD and minimize the burden on individuals and employers need to be developed and tested.

Acknowledgment

The authors thank Judith S Hurley, MS, for editorial assistance.

Disclosure

Jeetvan G Patel, Saurabh P Nagar and Anand A Dalal are employees of GlaxoSmithKline (GSK); Jeetvan G Patel and Anand A Dalal own GSK stock. The authors have no other conflicts of interest to declare.


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