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Nephrol Dial Transplant (1999) 14: 31-41
© 1999 European Renal Association-European Dialysis and Transplant Association


Article

Healthcare systems and end-stage renal disease (ESRD) therapies—an international review: costs and reimbursement/funding of ESRD therapies

A. F. De Vecchi, M. Dratwa1 and M. E. Wiedemann2

Divisione di Nefrologia e Dialisi, I. R. C. C. S. Ospedale Maggiore, Milano, Italy 1 Division of Nephrology, Hôpital Universitaire Brugmann, Munich, Germany 2 Baxter Deutschland GmbH, Munich, Germany

Correspondence and offprint requests to: Correspondence and offprint requests to: Dr A. F. De Vecchi, Divisione di Nefrologia e Dialisi, I. R. C. C. S. Ospedale Maggiore di Milano, Via Commenda, 15, 1-20122 Milano, Italy.

Background. In healthcare economics, the cost factor plays a leading role, particularly for chronic diseases such as end-stage renal disease because of the growing number of patients.

Objectives. An international comparison was made of the costs and reimbursement/funding of a selection of key dialysis modalities—centre haemodialysis (CHD), limited care haemodialysis (LCHD), home haemodialysis (home HD), continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD) and automated peritoneal dialysis (APD)—in various industrial countries. The focus was on treatment costs plus erythropoietin medication and reimbursement of transportation costs.

Results. Reimbursement/funding of dialysis is different from country to country, with some healthcare system specific commonalities: in ‘public’ systems, the funding is based more on global budgets, whereas in mixed public and private countries it is based mainly on reimbursement rates per treatment. Only in the ‘private system’ of the US is there one DRG (diagnostic-related group)-type rate for dialysis. By comparing the costs (in public countries) or reimbursements (in mixed countries) of treatment modalities within each country, we could see similar curves: the costs were the highest for public CHD, followed by private CHD. They were lower on LCHD and the lowest for home HD and CAPD, which were at nearly the same level. The cost level for APD was almost the same as that of LCHD. The reimbursements followed the cost pattern. Some countries introduced increases for CAPD and APD with the intention of increasing the share of home care. The costs and reimbursement patterns in the majority of countries (except the US and Japan) were very similar and therefore did not explain the different distribution of modalities in these countries. One explanation could be, however, the difference in microeconomics, CHD being a treatment with high fixed costs (personnel and structure) and CAPD being a treatment with low fixed costs, but high variable costs (supplies) and a low need for investments.

Discussion. The choice of treatment modality seems to be influenced strongly by the provider's perspective, being either public with limited HD capacity or private having invested in HD capacity. For public providers (and healthcare payers), CAPD is less expensive than CHD and offers a number of potential savings. In many countries, two CAPD patients could be treated for the same costs as one CHD patient. The microeconomics of private centres, however, are meant to use the investments maximally for CHD. Only if capacity limits are reached, is PD, with mainly supply costs, interesting. The future with constantly increasing numbers of patients and growing cost constraints will force all providers to make the best use of their resources by also offering home therapies such as PD to patients. The latter are cost efficient and offer comparable survival and quality of life.

Keywords: dialysis; costs; reimbursement; funding; haemodialysis; peritoneal dialysis; automated peritoneal dialysis


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