Skip to main content
Advertisement
Browse Subject Areas
?

Click through the PLOS taxonomy to find articles in your field.

For more information about PLOS Subject Areas, click here.

  • Loading metrics

Predictors of Costs in Dementia in a Longitudinal Perspective

  • Hanna Leicht,

    Affiliation Department of Health Economics and Health Services Research, Hamburg Center for Health Economics, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany

  • Hans-Helmut König ,

    h.koenig@uke.de

    Affiliation Department of Health Economics and Health Services Research, Hamburg Center for Health Economics, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany

  • Nina Stuhldreher,

    Affiliation Department of Health Economics and Health Services Research, Hamburg Center for Health Economics, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany

  • Cadja Bachmann,

    Affiliation Department of Primary Medical Care, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany

  • Horst Bickel,

    Affiliation Clinic and Policlinic for Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Munich Technical University, Munich, Germany

  • Angela Fuchs,

    Affiliation Department of General Practice, Medical Faculty, University of Düsseldorf, Düsseldorf, Germany

  • Kathrin Heser,

    Affiliation Department of Psychiatry, University of Bonn, Bonn, Germany

  • Frank Jessen,

    Affiliations Department of Psychiatry, University of Bonn, Bonn, Germany, German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE), Bonn, Germany

  • Mirjam Köhler,

    Affiliation Department of Primary Medical Care, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany

  • Melanie Luppa,

    Affiliation Institute of Social Medicine and Occupational Health, University of Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany

  • Edelgard Mösch,

    Affiliation Clinic and Policlinic for Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Munich Technical University, Munich, Germany

  • Michael Pentzek,

    Affiliation Department of General Practice, Medical Faculty, University of Düsseldorf, Düsseldorf, Germany

  • Steffi Riedel-Heller,

    Affiliation Institute of Social Medicine and Occupational Health, University of Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany

  • Martin Scherer,

    Affiliation Department of Primary Medical Care, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany

  • Jochen Werle,

    Affiliation Central Institute of Mental Health, Medical Faculty Mannheim/Heidelberg University, Mannheim, Germany

  • Siegfried Weyerer,

    Affiliation Central Institute of Mental Health, Medical Faculty Mannheim/Heidelberg University, Mannheim, Germany

  • Birgitt Wiese,

    Affiliation Institute for Biometrics, Hannover Medical School, Hannover, Germany

  • Wolfgang Maier,

    Affiliations Department of Psychiatry, University of Bonn, Bonn, Germany, German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE), Bonn, Germany

  •  [ ... ],
  • for the AgeCoDe study group

    Membership of the AgeCoDe study group is provided in the Acknowledgments.

  • [ view all ]
  • [ view less ]

Abstract

Objective

To analyse predictors of costs in dementia from a societal perspective in a longitudinal setting.

Method

Healthcare resource use and costs were assessed retrospectively using a questionnaire in four waves at 6-month intervals in a sample of dementia patients (N = 175). Sociodemographic data, dementia severity and comorbidity at baseline, cognitive impairment and impairment in basic and instrumental activities of daily living were also recorded. Linear mixed regression models with random intercepts for individuals were used to analyse predictors of total and sector-specific costs.

Results

Impairment in activities of daily living significantly predicted total costs in dementia patients, with associations between basic activities of daily living and formal care costs on the one and instrumental activities of daily living and informal care costs on the other hand. Nursing home residence was associated with lower total costs than residence in the community. There was no effect of cognition on total or sector-specific costs.

Conclusion

Cognitive deficits in dementia are associated with costs only via their effect on the patients' capacity for activities of daily living. Transition into a nursing home may reduce total costs from a societal perspective, owing to the fact that a high amount of informal care required by severely demented patients prior to transition into a nursing home may cause higher costs than inpatient nursing care.

Introduction

For Germany, the costs of illness (COI) of dementia in the population aged 65 and older were € 10.285 billion (US-$ 14.296 billion) in 2008, according to federal statistics [1]. This corresponded to 8.4% of all costs of illness in the same age bracket, which makes dementia one of the most expensive disease categories in old age. However, these data reflect medical and formal nursing care costs from a payer perspective, but do not include costs of care provided informally, so that the total costs of dementia in Germany from a societal perspective can be assumed to be substantially higher. Moreover, it is expected that due to demographic change expenditures associated with dementia will rise considerably in the future, especially as the baby boomer generation enters old age in the coming decades [2]. In 2010, 1.2 million dementia patients were estimated to be living in Germany, but this figure is expected to rise to 1.5 million in 2020 and to 2.6 million in 2050 [3]. Dementia as a syndrome is characterised clinically by progressive cognitive impairment which leads to increasing deficits in activities of daily living. It can be caused by different underlying diseases, the most common of which is Alzheimer's disease [4]. Dementia is associated with substantial need for care and supervision, which rises as the disease progresses. There is ample evidence to show that costs in dementia are generally characterised by three patterns: first, costs of dementia are to a large extent costs of nursing care, second, costs of nursing care increase substantially over the course of the disease (while most studies do not find an association between dementia severity and medical care costs), and third, informal care accounts for a substantial share of total costs if patients are cared for in the community (see [5] and [6] for reviews). The findings of the two most recent cross-sectional German studies which included informal care are in accordance with these patterns. Schwarzkopf et al. [7] reported total annual cost of € 40,000 (US-$ 55,600) in mild and € 62,800 (US-$ 87,290) in moderate dementia at year 2008 values for dementia patients cared for in the community. Informal care accounted for approximately 80% of total costs in this sample. In a study which analysed a mixed sample of dementia patients living in the community or in a nursing home as well as non-demented control subjects drawn from the AgeCoDe cohort, we found annual excess costs of € 15,500 in mild, € 31,600 in moderate and € 41,800 in severe dementia at year 2008 values (corresponding to US-$ 21,550, 43,920 and 58,100, respectively) [8]. Across disease stages approximately half of all costs were due to informal care.

The impact of dementia on costs of care is thus well-documented. However, virtually all of these findings are based on cross-sectional studies, while little has been published so far on the development of costs over time and its predictors. In the few longitudinal studies published so far, functional impairment was the only predictor that was invariably associated with both formal and informal care costs [9][13].

The current study is a longitudinal analysis of costs in dementia from a societal perspective. The data were collected as part of the AgeCoDe study, and the aim of this study is to investigate potential predictors of costs over time, including medical care costs as well as formal and informal care costs.

Methods

Ethics Statement

The ethics committees of the participating centers approved the study (reference numbers: 050/02 (University of Bonn), 2079 (Faculty of Medicine, University of Düsseldorf), 2817/2007 (Hamburg Medical Association), 309/2007 (Faculty of Medicine, University of Leipzig), 2007-253E-MA (Medical Ethics Commission II, University of Heidelberg at the University Medical Center of Mannheim), 713/02 (Faculty of Medicine, Technical University of Munich)). The study was conducted according to the principles expressed in the Declaration of Helsinki. Written informed consent was obtained from all participants at recruitment. Once a patient had been diagnosed with dementia, written informed consent was obtained from a proxy.

Data and Samples

Data were collected as part of the German Study on Ageing, Cognition and Dementia in Primary Care Patients (AgeCoDe). The subjects in the AgeCoDe cohort were recruited through general practitioners' (GP) offices at six study centres throughout Germany during the baseline assessment in 2003 and 2004, and have since been followed up at 1.5-year intervals (to date, the study is ongoing). Inclusion criteria at recruitment were age 75 years and above, absence of dementia and at least one contact with the GP during the previous 12 months. Exclusion criteria at recruitment were insufficient German language skills, GP consultation by home visits only, residence in a nursing home, severe illness which the GP would deem fatal within 3 months, deafness or blindness, and lack of ability to provide informed consent. Details regarding the cohort have been published elsewhere [14].

The data for the analyses presented here were obtained from a subsample of the AgeCoDe cohort which comprises those subjects who had received a diagnosis of dementia by the time of the third AgeCoDe follow-up wave (approximately 4.5 years after the AgeCoDe baseline; N = 175). For this subsample an assessment of healthcare resource use was introduced into the assessment battery at the third follow-up wave, and subjects were given additional follow-up assessments at 6-month intervals between the major AgeCoDe follow-up waves. The present analyses comprise healthcare resource use data from four assessments at 6-month intervals, starting with the third AgeCoDe follow-up wave and covering a time-span of 1.5 years. For the purposes of this study, the third AgeCoDe follow-up wave is henceforth regarded as the baseline. 1.5 years after baseline, 104 dementia patients remained in the sample, while 44 patients had died and 27 had dropped out for other reasons (see Figure 1). Data were collected in structured interviews with the patients and their proxies that were conducted by trained staff at the patients' homes.

thumbnail
Figure 1. Sample sizes and drop-outs across waves.

* These are patients who were unavailable for interview due to reasons such as illness for the respective assessment wave, but remained in the study and were interviewed in subsequent waves.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0070018.g001

Sociodemographic and clinical variables

Sociodemographic data include age, sex, family status and living situation. Classification of dementia severity for the purposes of this study was based on the Clinical Dementia Rating (CDR [15]), which covers deficits in memory and other cognitive domains as well as impairment in activities of daily living. The CDR yields an overall score of 0 (normal), 0.5 (very mild dementia), 1 (mild dementia), 2 (moderate dementia) or 3 (severe dementia). “Mild dementia” in this study. corresponds to a CDR score of 1 or less, while “moderate” and “severe dementia” correspond to the CDR scores 2 and 3, respectively. The Mini-Mental Status Exam (MMSE [16]) and the Global Deterioration Scale (GDS [17]) were also used to assess cognitive impairment. The MMSE is a screening instrument for cognitive impairment with a total score ranging from 30 (no impairment) to 0. The GDS is used to measure dementia severity and produces a score between 1 (no impairment) and 7 (severe dementia). The Barthel Index [18] was employed to assess deficits in activities of daily living (ADL). The degree of impairment is measured indicated on a scale between 100 (no deficits) and 0. Impairment in instrumental activities of daily living (IADL), i.e. activities beyond self-care, was recorded by means of the IADL scale by Lawton and Brody [19], which produces a score between 8 (no impairment) and 0.

Diagnosis of dementia

Dementia was diagnosed on the basis of a consensus between the interviewer and an experienced geriatrician or geriatric psychiatrist according to DSM-IV criteria for dementia of different types as implemented in the structured SIDAM interview [20]. Diagnostic criteria were objective deficits in memory and another cognitive domain as well as ADL impairment.

Comorbidity

At the third follow-up assessment, twenty-eight chronic conditions other than dementia were scored as present or absent and rated from 1–4 according to severity if present by the subjects' GPs. These data were combined into simple and weighted count scores (weighted score: sum of severity ratings for conditions scored as present). The list of conditions includes diabetes, hypertension, cardiac arrhythmia, coronary heart disease, myocardial infarction, hyperlipidemia, hypercholesteremia, chronic heart failure, peripheral arterial disease, Parkinson's disease, epilepsy, depression, alcohol abuse, stenosis, transient ischaemic attack, stroke, hyperthyroidism, hypothyroidism, renal insufficiency, chronic liver disease, traumatic brain injury, back pain, arthrosis, obesity, gout, varicose veins, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, asthma and gastritis. The list of comorbidities was compiled to reflect both conditions which constitute risk factors for dementia according to the literature, and conditions which are frequent in the general population of the age range investigated in this study.

Healthcare resource use

Resource use was recorded by means of a questionnaire administered as part of the interview, using a proxy version that was completed by a caregiver. The resource use questionnaire is adapted from questionnaires used in previous investigations by the same working group (e.g. [21], [22]) and is available from the authors upon request. The questionnaire covers in-patient treatment, out-patient physician treatment, pharmaceuticals, other kinds of out-patient treatment (such as physical or occupational therapy), medical supplies and dental prostheses, nursing home care, professional nursing services and other paid help as well as informal care (see Table 1). This latter part of the questionnaire is based on an instrument developed by Neubauer et al. [23], which again is based on the Resource Utilisation in Dementia instrument [24]. It contains separate items for the number of hours per day spent by informal caregivers on basic care, shopping, housework, assistance with medication, preparation of meals, financial matters, or taking the patient to appointments etc. Hours of supervision were also included in the questionnaire, but were not evaluated in the results presented here due to lack of reliability, which is evidenced by numerous entries of “24 hours per day” for supervision, resulting in wildly implausible total hours of care per day. Assessment was retrospective and covered a period of 3 months, except for in-patient treatment and nursing-home care for which the period was 6 months. In order to minimise recall bias, the questionnaire contained lists of common resources and services.

Healthcare costs

Resource use was assessed from a societal perspective, therefore all resources and services used were recorded, regardless of whether they were paid for out-of-pocket or covered by health or nursing insurance. The costs analysed in this study are direct costs of illness, arising from the use of resources. Indirect costs due to lost productivity are disregarded due to the advanced age of the subjects.

Healthcare costs were calculated for a 6-month period, multiplying resource use by two in sections which covered a 3-month period. Costs were calculated from resource use as recorded in the questionnaire by means of unit costs, the sources of which are listed in Table 1. Informal care was valued using the replacement cost approach (or proxy good method), i.e. it was assumed that the same amount of care would have been provided by professional nursing services in the absence of an informal caregiver. Therefore, hours of informal care were valued using the same hourly wage rate as for professional home care (see van den Berg [25] for an overview of methods for the valuation of informal care). This rate was €18.69 per hour (US-$ 25.98) and reflects the average gross wage rate plus non-wage labour costs for employees in the domain of care and assistance for the elderly or handicapped. Nursing home residence was valued at rates of €56.40, €70.76 and €85.13 per day (US-$ 78.40, US-$ 98.36 and US-$ 118.33) according to care level [26]. Details regarding specific unit costs can be found in Table S1. Cost were calculated in € at 2008 price levels. Unit costs that were unavailable at year 2008 values were inflated or deflated to year 2008 price levels by means of the consumer price index [27]. For comparability, costs in € at year 2008 price levels were converted to US-$ at a rate of 1.39 US-$ per € [28].

Sensitivity analysis

In a sensitivity analysis, the unit costs for informal care were varied using three additional approaches. Under the replacement cost approach as in the base case analysis, hours of informal care were valued using the minimum wage in health care and nursing professions which has been effective in Germany as of July 2010. As a population-weighted average of the gross hourly rates for eastern and western Germany (7.50 € and 8.50 €, respectively) plus non-wage labour costs, a rate of 10.96 €/hour was applied.

In addition, we used the opportunity cost approach under which hours of informal care are valued according to their best alternative use [25]. If informal care is assumed to constitute lost leisure time (as would apply if a patient is cared for by a spouse of retirement age or by a child in his or her spare time), this is valued at the mean hourly net wage plus unemployment and pension insurance contributions [29]. In 2008 the corresponding hourly rate for Germany was 18.00 € [30], [31] and thus almost identical to the replacement costs used in our baseline analysis. If informal care is assumed to constitute lost production in the formal economy (corresponding to a situation where a spouse or child gives up paid employment in order to provide informal care), it is valued at the mean hourly market wage rate including non-wage labour costs [25]. In 2008 the corresponding hourly rate for Germany was 29.60 € [31].

Statistical analyses

Missing values for quantities of resource use were imputed using the means of the observed data for the respective items (conditional means), with the exception of missing values for the dosage of medication. As medications and their dosage were too varied interindividually for mean imputation to be possible, costs for medication with missing values for dosage were calculated using a conservative rule, whereby the pharmacy retail price of one package of the drug per 3 months was applied. Missing values occurred for individual items across sections, but made up no more than 2.3% of the data, except for one particular item concerning time spent by informal caregivers on financial matters, which produced up to 5.2% missing values. Between 1.6% (third follow-up) and 3.0% (baseline) of entries for medication could not be processed on account of insufficiently specific data and were excluded from the analysis.

Differences in proportions were tested by means of the χ2 test or Fisher's exact test, as appropriate. Group differences were analysed using two-tailed t-tests.

Linear mixed regression models with random intercepts for individuals were used for longitudinal analyses of the factors which determine costs in dementia patients. These analyses were calculated for total costs as well as for the subcategories medical care costs, formal care costs and informal care costs, using the data from all four waves, with the waves entered into the model as the variable “time”. The coefficient for “time” therefore corresponds to the changes in costs that occur over a six-month interval, controlling for the other predictors. Age, sex and the weighted comorbidity score at baseline were entered as time-independent variables, while nursing home residence (reference category: living at home) and the Barthel index, IADL and GDS scores were entered as time-dependent variables. In the sensitivity analysis, the same models were estimated again for informal care costs and total costs in the three different scenarios.

We used bootstrapped standard errors (based on 4,000 replications) in the regression analyses to account for the skewness of the cost data [32]. We also estimated alternative models with an additional random intercept for study center. However, as there was no significant effect for study center and these models virtually did not differ from the simpler ones, the random intercept for study center was dropped from analysis.

Statistical analysis was performed using STATA Release 11 (Stata Corp., College Station, Texas).

Results

Sociodemographic and clinical variables

Sociodemographic and clinical data for the sample at baseline and at 1.5 years after baseline (third follow-up) are presented in Table 2. At baseline, subjects were on average 85.3 years old, with 69% being female. Overall, the clinical variables indicate substantial impairment among the patients at baseline.

There are clear trends over time in the sample indicating lower MMSE, Barthel index, IADL and GDS scores 1.5 years after the baseline assessment. Also, the proportions of patients with mild, moderate and severe dementia had shifted toward the more severe stages, with 26.0% and 21.2% in the moderate and severe categories 1.5 years after baseline as opposed to 17.7% and 13.1% at baseline, and the proportion of nursing home residents had risen from 27.4% to 38.5%. A comparison of baseline data for subjects with complete follow-up and for those who dropped out of the cohort at any stage after the baseline assessment indicated that drop-outs were initially more severely impaired, which was evident in MMSE scores, Barthel scores, IADL scores and GDS scores (Table 3).

Resource use

Figure 2 shows the proportions of the dementia and control samples with resource use by healthcare sector at baseline and 1.5 years after baseline. Additionally, average amounts of resource use for selected services are presented in Table 4. At baseline, dementia patients required 2.2 hours or professional nursing care per week, while after 1.5 years, this figure had risen to 6.2 hours per week. However, no trend over time is evident in unadjusted values for use of medical care or informal care.

thumbnail
Figure 2. Sample proportions with resource use: baseline vs. 1.5 years.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0070018.g002

Healthcare costs

Unadjusted average costs by healthcare sector across waves are presented in Table 5. Total 6-month costs in dementia patients rose from € 15,265 (US-$ 21,218) to € 17.073 (US-$ 23,731) over the 1.5-year interval. It is evident that a large proportion of total costs is due to the different areas of nursing care, with a trend towards an increasing share of nursing home costs over time.

Cost predictors in dementia

Table 6 presents the results of linear mixed models that analyse predictors of costs in dementia patients. There were highly significant effects of both ADL (Barthel score) and IADL deficits on total costs. Nursing home residence was associated with lower costs than being cared for in the community (€ 4,554 per six months, or US-$ 6,330). ADL deficits were the only significant predictor for medical care costs. With regard to formal nursing care, there were significant effects of age (€ 326 or US-$ 453 in six months per year of age), gender (additional 6-month costs of € 1.267 or US-$ 1,761 for male patients), nursing home residence (extra costs of € 6.469 or US-$ 8,992) and ADL deficits on costs. Finally, informal care costs declined with age (€ 280 or US-$ 389 in six months per year of age). They were influenced by comorbidity and IADL deficits, and, not surprisingly, informal care costs were substantially lower (€ 9,242 or US-$ 12,846 per six months) in nursing home residents.

thumbnail
Table 6. Longitudinal predictors of costs in dementia patients (6-month costs in € at 2008 values).

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0070018.t006

Sensitivity analysis

The results of the sensitivity analysis are presented in Table 7. When informal care is valued at the minimum wage rate of €10.96/hour, there is no significant effect of nursing home residence on total costs as compared to residence in the community. With informal care valued as lost leisure, nursing home residence is associated with lower total costs (€ 4,188 per six months, or US-$ 5,821), an effect which is even more pronounced if informal care is valued as lost production (€ 10,278 per six months, or US-$ 14,286).

thumbnail
Table 7. Sensitivity analysis: Longitudinal predictors of informal care costs and total costs in dementia patients (6-month costs in € at 2008 values) for different unit costs for informal care.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0070018.t007

Discussion

Our results show that total costs in dementia patients are mostly determined by impairment in basic and instrumental activities of daily living. Also, there was a substantial negative effect of nursing home residence on overall costs, indicating that the societal costs of caring for patients in the community can be considerably higher than nursing home costs if informal care is taken into account. This is also reflected in the effects of nursing home residence on formal and informal care, respectively, with the negative effect of nursing home residence on informal care costs exceeding the positive effect of nursing home residence on formal care costs. With respect to separate cost categories, ADL deficits were associated with higher medical and formal care costs, but not informal care costs. The latter, by contrast, were significantly increased by IADL deficits. This split between ADL and IADL deficits as determinants of formal care on the one and informal care on the other hand might indicate that ADL deficits are predominantly met by formal care, while assistance with IADL is a domain covered by informal caregivers. There was no overall effect of age, gender or comorbidity. However, formal care costs increased with age and were higher in men than in women, while controlling for living situation. This gender effect might be linked to the fact that men in this age range are more likely to be living with a spouse than women. In our sample, slightly more than half of the men were living with their spouse at both baseline and at 1.5 years, as opposed to fewer than 20% of the women (data not shown). Men might thus be able to remain in their homes, being cared for by their spouses and using formal care in addition, in a situation in which women in the absence of a spouse, who is able to provide informal care and/or arrange for professional home care, might have to be admitted to a nursing home. Comorbidity was associated with higher informal care costs only. In particular, there was no effect of comorbidity on medical care costs. Of note, we found no effect of cognitive impairment as measured by the GDS on either total costs or costs in any of the subcategories. This implies that cognitive impairment, which is itself the cause of functional impairment in dementia, is associated with need for care and corresponding costs only via its effect on the patients' functional capacity as reflected in the ADL and IADL score. The costs of informal care, in particular, depend on the method of valuation. We therefore varied the unit costs for informal care, using three separate scenarios. On the whole, this sensitivity analysis supports the conclusion that – from a societal point of view – nursing home care is associated with lower total costs than care in the community. At one extreme in our sensitivity analysis, if informal care is valued at a minimum wage rate under the replacement cost approach, there is no significant cost difference in total costs between nursing home residence and community residence. However, if informal care is valued in terms of lost leisure or, at the other extreme, in terms of lost production under the opportunity cost approach, care in the community is associated with additional costs of approximately € 4,000 or € 10,000 per six months (US-$ 5,500 or US-$ 14,000).

Previous longitudinal COI studies

Overall, our results are in good accordance with previously published longitudinal COI studies in dementia. Across studies, functional decline emerges as the principal predictor of costs of care in dementia. Andersen et al. [9] reported such an effect in a longitudinal study of costs of care from a societal perspective which did not, however, include informal care. In this study, the move into a nursing home was associated with a marked increase in total costs. Similarly, in another study of formal care costs only Zhu et al. [12] found living at home to be associated with significantly lower costs. Again, costs were significantly determined by functional impairment, with another significant effect of comorbidity. These findings correspond to our results; however, in our sample, the additional formal care costs associated with nursing home residence are more than counterbalanced by the decreased informal care costs. As to determinants of informal care costs results are essentially similar, with significant effects of functional impairment reported in studies by Zhu et al. [10], [11] and Rapp et al. [13]. Zhu et al. [10] also reported an effect of patient dependence on other individuals in addition to the effect of functional impairment. There is little evidence that cognitive impairment as such has an effect on costs beyond the effect of functional impairment (which is itself a consequence of cognitive deficits). Rapp et al. [13] do find an effect of MMSE on costs, but report that this effect is diminished when ADL is simultaneously included in the analysis. Comorbidity was shown in different studies to have effects on costs of medical care [10], formal care costs [9], [12] and use of informal care [11]. Gender effects were not consistently found and varied in direction.

Strengths and limitations

A major strength of the AgeCoDe study is that the cohort was recruited via GP offices. Since 93% of people aged 70 or older regularly visit a GP, the cohort can be regarded as close to representative for this age bracket, even though a degree of participation bias cannot be ruled out [14]. With respect to disease severity in the dementia subsample, the proportions are likely to be biased towards the mild stage in comparison with the general population of the same age, due to the exclusion of subjects with dementia at recruitment, i.e. those subjects who had developed dementia before the age of 75. Also, as the baseline differences between dementia patients with complete data over 1.5 years and drop-outs after the baseline assessment indicate, the more severely demented patients at baseline may have been disproportionately more likely to drop out during the course of the study. Consequently, the longitudinal data analysed here may not fully reflect the natural course of dementia. However, while these limitations may lead to unadjusted total costs that underestimate costs of dementia, they should not affect the results of the regression analyses presented in this study, in which dementia severity or indicators of impairment are controlled for. Another issue to be kept in mind is that subjects were at least 79 years old at baseline. This is a strength insofar as there are few COI studies in dementia which have investigated samples of a similarly advanced age. On the other hand, however, patterns of care and resulting cost estimates might differ in populations with a more varied age structure.

With regard to the valuation of informal care, one caveat concerns the assumption inherent in the replacement cost approach (or proxy good method) that professional care and informal care are substitutes, i.e. that informal care perfectly replaces formal care. It may be argued that professional caregivers are likely to be more efficient at their tasks than informal caregivers, so that valuing informal care time using hourly wage rates for professional caregivers overestimates the costs of nursing care. However, the sensitivity analysis demonstrates that using the opportunity cost approach as an alternative for the valuation of informal care either has very little effect on costs, if informal care time is regarded as lost leisure and an hourly rate of €18.00 is applied, or is associated with even higher estimates for costs of informal care, if informal care time is assumed to constitute lost production and is valued at € 29.60 per hour.

Conclusions

This is one of few longitudinal studies so far to examine overall COI in dementia from a societal perspective, including formal as well as informal care. Findings confirm the role of ADL and IADL impairment as the principal cost determinants. Unlike similar previous studies the analyses presented here afford estimates of the effect of nursing home residence on costs of formal nursing care and informal care as well as on total costs from a societal perspective. Findings indicate that, although cost estimates vary depending on the method of valuation for informal care, care for patients who live in the community is associated with higher total costs than nursing home residence. The fact that from a societal perspective nursing home residence is associated with relatively smaller costs than care in a community setting does not imply that nursing home care should necessarily be preferred, but it underlines the societal relevance that informal care has within the larger current framework of care for dementia patients.

Supporting Information

Table S1.

Detailed unit costs (base case analysis).

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0070018.s001

(DOCX)

Acknowledgments

Further members of the AgeCoDe Study Group:

Principal Investigators*: Wolfgang Maier, Martin Scherer

Heinz-Harald Abholz, Christian Brettschneider, Wolfgang Blank, Hendrik van den Bussche, Sandra Eifflaender-Gorfer, Marion Eisele, Annette Ernst, Kathrin Heser, Frank Jessen, Hanna Kaduszkiewicz, Teresa Kaufeler, Alexander Koppara, Carolin Lange, Tobias Luck, Manfred Mayer, Julia Olbrich, Jana Prokein, Anna Schumacher, Janine Stein, Susanne Steinmann, Franziska Tebarth, Michael Wagner, Klaus Weckbecker, Dagmar Weeg, Steffen Wolfsgruber, Thomas Zimmermann.

*Hendrik van den Bussche (2002–2011)

Author Contributions

Conceived and designed the experiments: HHK CB HB AF KH FJ MK ML EM MP SRH MS JW SW BW WM. Analyzed the data: HL HHK NS. Wrote the paper: HL HHK.

References

  1. 1. Statistisches Bundesamt: Krankheitskostenrechnung 2008. Available: http://www.gbe-bund.de. Accessed 2012 May 19.
  2. 2. Statistisches Bundesamt (2010) Demographischer Wandel in Deutschland, Heft 2. Wiesbaden: Statistisches Bundesamt.
  3. 3. Weyerer S, Bickel H (2007) Epidemiologie psychischer Erkrankungen im höheren Lebensalter. Stuttgart: Kohlhammer.
  4. 4. Fratiglioni L, Launer LJ, Andersen K, Breteler MM, Copeland JR, et al. (2000) Incidence of dementia and major subtypes in Europe: A collaborative study of population-based cohorts. Neurology 54: S10–S15.
  5. 5. Jönsson L, Wimo A (2009) The Cost of Dementia in Europe: A Review of the Evidence, and Methodological Considerations. Pharmacoeconomics 27: 391–403.
  6. 6. Quentin W, Riedel-Heller SG, Luppa M, Rudolph A, König HH (2010) Cost-of-illness studies of dementia: a systematic review focusing on stage dependency of costs. Acta Psychiatr Scand 121: 243–259.
  7. 7. Schwarzkopf L, Menn P, Kunz S, Holle R, Lauterberg J, et al. (2011) Costs of care for dementia patients in community setting: an analysis for mild and moderate disease stage. Value Health 14: 827–835.
  8. 8. Leicht H, Heinrich S, Heider D, Bachmann C, Bickel H, et al. (2011) Net costs of dementia by disease stage. Acta Psychiatr Scand 124: 384–395.
  9. 9. Andersen CK, Lauridsen J, Andersen K, Kragh-Sorensen P (2003) Cost of dementia: impact of disease progression estimated in longitudinal data. Scand J Public Health 31: 119–125.
  10. 10. Zhu CW, Leibman C, McLaughlin T, Zbrozek AS, Scarmeas N, et al. (2008) Patient Dependence and Longitudinal Changes in Costs of Care in Alzheimer's Disease. Dement Geriatr Cogn Disord 26: 416–423.
  11. 11. Zhu CW, Scarmeas N, Torgan R, Albert M, Brandt J, et al. (2006) Clinical characteristics and longitudinal changes of informal cost of Alzheimer's disease in the community. J Am Geriatr Soc 54: 1596–1602.
  12. 12. Zhu CW, Scarmeas N, Torgan R, Albert M, Brandt J, et al. (2006) Longitudinal study of effects of patient characteristics on direct costs in Alzheimer disease. Neurology 67: 998–1005.
  13. 13. Rapp T, Andrieu S, Molinier L, Grand A, Cantet C, et al. (2012) Exploring the relationship between Alzheimer's Disease Severity and Longitudinal Costs. Value Health 15: 412–419.
  14. 14. Luck T, Riedel-Heller SG, Luppa M, Wiese B, Wollny A, et al. (2010) Risk factors for incident mild cognitive impairment - results from the German Study on Ageing, Cognition and Dementia in Primary Care Patients (AgeCoDe). Acta Psychiatr Scand 121: 260–272.
  15. 15. Morris JC (1993) The Clinical Dementia Rating (CDR) - Current Version and Scoring Rules. Neurology 43: 2412–2414.
  16. 16. Folstein MF, Folstein SE, McHugh PR (1975) Mini-Mental State - A practical method for grading the cognitive state of patients for the clinician. J Psychiatr Res 12: 189–198.
  17. 17. Reisberg B, Ferris SH, de Leon MJ, Crook T (1982) The Global Deterioration Scale for assessment of primary degenerative dementia. Am J Psychiatry 139: 1136–1139.
  18. 18. Mahoney FI, Barthel DW (1965) Functional Evaluation: the Barthel Index. Md State Med J 14: 61–65.
  19. 19. Lawton MP, Brody EM (1969) Assessment of older people: self-maintaining and instrumental activities of daily living. Gerontologist 9: 179–186.
  20. 20. Zaudig M, Mittelhammer J, Hiller W, Pauls A, Thora C, et al. (1991) SIDAM: A structured interview for the diagnosis of dementia of the Alzheimer type, multi-infarct dementia and dementias of other aetiology according to ICD-10 and DSM-III-R. Psychol Med 21: 225–236.
  21. 21. Heinrich S, Luppa M, Matschinger H, Angermeyer MC, Riedel-Heller SG, et al. (2008) Service utilization and health-care costs in the advanced elderly. Value Health 11: 611–620.
  22. 22. König HH, Born A, Heider D, Matschinger H, Heinrich S, et al. (2009) Cost-effectiveness of a primary care model for anxiety disorders. Br J Psychiatry 195: 308–317.
  23. 23. Neubauer S, Holle R, Menn P, Grassel E (2009) A valid instrument for measuring informal care time for people with dementia. Int J of Geriatr Psychiatry 24: 275–282.
  24. 24. Wimo A, Nordberg G (2007) Validity and reliability of assessments of time - Comparisons of direct observations and estimates of time by the use of the resource utilization in dementia (RUD)-instrument. Arch Gerontol Geriatr 44: 71–81.
  25. 25. van den Berg B, Brouwer WBF, Koopmanschap MA (2004) Economic valuation of informal care. An overview of methods and applications. Eur J Health Econ 5: 36–45.
  26. 26. Statistisches Bundesamt (2008) Pflegestatistik 2007. Wiesbaden: Statistisches Bundesamt.
  27. 27. Statistisches Bundesamt (2010) Verbraucherpreisindizes für Deutschland. Wiesbaden: Statistisches Bundesamt.
  28. 28. Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development: Main economic indicators: Financial indicators. OECD 2012. Available: http://oecd.stats.org. Accessed 2012 Sep 10.
  29. 29. Posnett J, Jan S (1996) Indirect cost in economic evaluation: The opportunity cost of unpaid inputs. Health Econ 5: 13–23.
  30. 30. Statistisches Bundesamt (2010) Volkswirtschaftliche Gesamtrechnung 2009. Wiesbaden: Statistisches Bundesamt.
  31. 31. Statistisches Bundesamt (2009) Statistisches Jahrbuch 2009. Wiesbaden: Statistisches Bundesamt.
  32. 32. Desgagné A, Castilloux AM, Angers JF, LeLorier J (1998) The use of the bootstrap statistical method for the pharmacoeconomic cost analysis of skewed data. Pharmacoeconomics 13: 487–497.
  33. 33. Deutsche Krankenhausgesellschaft (2009) Bestandsaufnahme zur Krankenhausplanung und Investitionsfinanzierung in den Bundesländern. Berlin: Deutsche Krankenhausgesellschaft.
  34. 34. Statistisches Bundesamt (2009) Grunddaten der Krankenhäuser 2008. Wiesbaden: Statistisches Bundesamt.
  35. 35. Statistisches Bundesamt (2009) Kostennachweis der Krankenhäuser 2008. Wiesbaden: Statistisches Bundesamt.
  36. 36. Krauth C, Hessel F, Hansmeier T, Wasem J, Seitz R, et al. (2005) Empirische Bewertungssätze in der gesundheitsökonomischen Evaluation - ein Vorschlag der AG Methoden der gesundheitsökonomischen Evaluation (AG MEG). Gesundheitswesen 67: 736–746.
  37. 37. Verband der Ersatzkassen (2001) Vergütungslisten für logopädische/sprachtherapeutische Leistungen. Berlin: Verband der Ersatzkassen (vdek).
  38. 38. Verband der Ersatzkassen (2002) Vergütungsliste für ergotherapeutische Leistungen. Berlin: Verband der Ersatzkassen (vdek).
  39. 39. Verband der Ersatzkassen (2007) Vergütungsliste für podologische Leistungen. Berlin: Verband der Ersatzkassen (vdek).
  40. 40. GKV-Spitzenverband (2007) Festbeträge. Berlin: GKV-Spitzenverband.
  41. 41. Kassenzahn?rztliche Bundesvereinigung (2009) Abrechnungshilfe für Festzuschüsse. Köln:Kassenzahnärztliche Bundesvereinigung.
  42. 42. Rote Liste Service GmbH (2008) Rote Liste 2008. Arzneimittelverzeichnis für Deutschland. Frankfurt/Main: Rote Liste Service GmbH.
  43. 43. Statistisches Bundesamt (2009) Verdienste und Arbeitskosten 2008. Wiesbaden: Statistisches Bundesamt.
  44. 44. Statistisches Bundesamt (2008) Verdienste in Deutschland und Arbeitskosten im EU-Vergleich. Press release no. 179. Available: http://www.destatis.de. Accessed 2012 May 19.