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Published Online
on August 31, 2006

Stroke. 2006
Published online before print August 31, 2006, doi: 10.1161/01.STR.0000240508.28625.2c
A more recent version of this article appeared on October 1, 2006
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Submitted on June 30, 2006
Accepted on July 13, 2006

Population-Based Study of Determinants of Initial Secondary Care Costs of Acute Stroke in the United Kingdom

Ramon Luengo-Fernandez MSc; Alastair M. Gray PhD; and Peter M. Rothwell FRCP*

From the Health Economics Research Centre (R.L.-F., A.M.G.), Department of Public Health and Stroke Prevention Research Unit (P.M.R.), Department of Clinical Neurology, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: peter.rothwell{at}clneuro.ox.ac.uk.

Background and Purpose--To determine the cost-effectiveness of specific interventions to prevent or treat acute stroke, it is necessary to know the costs of stroke according to patient characteristics and stroke subtype and etiology. However, very few such data are available and none from population-based studies. We determined the predictors of resource use and acute care costs of stroke using data from a population-based study.

Methods--Data were obtained from the Oxford Vascular study, a population-based cohort of all individuals in nine general practices in Oxfordshire, UK, which identified 346 patients with a first or recurrent stroke during April 1, 2002, to March 31, 2004. Univariate and multivariate analyses were performed to identify the main predictors of resource use and costs.

Results--Acute care costs ranged from £326 (lower decile) to £19 901 (upper decile). There were multiple important univariate interrelations of patient characteristics, stroke subtype, and stroke etiology with hospital admission, length of stay, and 30-day case-fatality. For example, patients with primary intracerebral hemorrhage were more likely to be admitted than patients with partial anterior circulation ischemic stroke and less likely to survive without disability, but length of stay was reduced as a result of high early case-fatality such that cost was substantially less. However, the majority of univariate predictors of resource use, cost, and outcome were confounded by initial stroke severity as measured by the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score, which accounted for approximately half of the predicted variance in cost. Cost increased approximately linearly up to an National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score of 18 and then fell steeply at higher scores as a result of rising early case-fatality.

Conclusions--Several patient and event-related characteristics explained the wide range of initial secondary care costs of acute stroke, but stroke severity was by far the most important independent predictor.


Key words: costs and cost analysis • outcome • stroke




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