Is diabetes mellitus equivalent to atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease from a healthcare cost perspective? Insights from the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey
Feldman DI, Valero-Elizondo J, Salami JA, Rana JS, Ogunmoroti O, Okunrintemi V, Osondu CU, Spatz ES, Virani SS, Blankstein R, Blaha MJ, Veledar E, Nasir K. Is diabetes mellitus equivalent to atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease from a healthcare cost perspective? Insights from the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey. Cardiovascular Endocrinology & Metabolism 2018, 7: 64-67. PMID: 31646284, PMCID: PMC6739895, DOI: 10.1097/xce.0000000000000151.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchAtherosclerotic cardiovascular diseaseDiabetes mellitusMedical Expenditure Panel SurveyCardiovascular diseaseMajor adverse cardiac eventsAggressive therapeutic managementAdverse cardiac eventsLower healthcare expendituresCardiac eventsSecondary preventionTherapeutic managementHealthcare costsEconomic burdenProper lifestyleHealthcare expendituresHousehold ComponentMellitusPanel SurveyDiseasePriority conditionsResource utilizationCliniciansDiagnosisIndividualsPreventionFavorable Modifiable Cardiovascular Risk Profile Is Associated With Lower Healthcare Costs Among Cancer Patients: The 2012–2013 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey
Singh J, Valero‐Elizondo J, Salami JA, Warraich HJ, Ogunmoroti O, Spatz ES, Desai N, Rana JS, Virani SS, Blankstein R, Blaha MJ, Nasir K. Favorable Modifiable Cardiovascular Risk Profile Is Associated With Lower Healthcare Costs Among Cancer Patients: The 2012–2013 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey. Journal Of The American Heart Association 2018, 7: e007874. PMID: 29686026, PMCID: PMC6015292, DOI: 10.1161/jaha.117.007874.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsAtherosclerotic cardiovascular diseaseAbsence of ASCVDCancer patientsMedical Expenditure PanelCRF profileRepresentative US adult populationHealthcare expendituresCardiovascular risk profileRisk factor profileBurden of cancerMean annual costAnnual healthcare expendituresMedical Expenditure Panel SurveyUS adult populationLower medical expendituresYears of ageLower healthcare costsCardiovascular managementCardiovascular diseaseHigh prevalenceRepresentative adult sampleUS adultsTwo-part econometric modelHealthcare costsEconomic burden