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    Direct Ophthalmic Healthcare Resource Use among Geographic Atrophy Patients in a Large Cohort from the United Kingdom

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    Objective To estimate the direct ophthalmic health care resource use in patients with geographic atrophy (GA) secondary to age-related macular degeneration (AMD). Design Retrospective analysis of anonymized data derived from electronic medical records acquired at 10 clinical sites in the United Kingdom. Participants Patients aged ≥50 years with ≥1 eye with a clinical record of GA or, for comparison, bilateral early/intermediate AMD. Four subgroups were identified: GA in both eyes (GA : GA); GA in 1 eye, choroidal neovascularization (CNV) in the fellow eye (GA : CNV); GA in 1 eye with early or intermediate AMD in the fellow eye (GA : E); and early/intermediate AMD in both eyes (E : E). Methods Electronic medical records were analyzed to derive the median number of visits over the first 2 years following diagnosis of GA or early/intermediate AMD. Clinical tests recorded at visits were used to calculate estimated costs (payer perspective) of monitoring. Analyses were restricted to patients with an initial diagnosis on or after January 1, 2011 to represent present day monitoring and costs associated with AMD. Main Outcome Measures Median number of visits and estimated monitoring costs per patient (in £) over the first 2 years among patients with ≥2 years of follow-up and in the individual subgroups. Intravitreal treatment costs in the GA : CNV group were excluded. Results For all 3 GA subgroups (n = 1080), the median number of visits over the first 2 years was 5 and monitoring costs were £460.80 per patient. The GA : CNV subgroup (n = 355) had the highest number of visits (median, 15), with a cost of £1581, compared with the GA : E subgroup (n = 283; median 4 visits; cost ∼£369) and the GA : GA subgroup (n = 442; median 3 visits; cost ∼£277). Ophthalmic tests were conducted most frequently in the GA : CNV subgroup. Visits and costs in the E : E subgroup (n = 6079) were lower. Conclusions Resource use in patients with GA varies considerably and is strongly influenced by the concomitant presence of CNV and lack of monitoring strategies for GA
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