High Rates of Disability and Health Care Use
Found in Older Americans with Cirrhosis
Newswise, January 11, 2012 — Older patients
with cirrhosis have significant functional
disability, require twice the amount of
informal caregiving, and contribute added
strain on the health care system, according
to U-M research published in Hepatology.
Given the increase in obesity and aging of
those with hepatitis C (HCV), researchers
expect the prevalence of cirrhosis to climb
among older Americans..
Cirrhosis is a chronic condition that causes
the liver to slowly deteriorate, with scar
tissue replacing healthy tissue and
impairing liver function.
Studies have shown that non-alcoholic fatty
liver disease (NAFLD) — ranging in severity
from fatty liver to nonalcoholic
steatohepatitis (NASH) to cirrhosis — has
become the most prevalent cause of chronic
liver disease worldwide, affecting up to 30
percent of the general population and found
in 75 percent of obese individuals.
The Action Plan for Liver Disease Research
estimates that 5.5 million Americans have
chronic liver disease or cirrhosis, which is
one of the most expensive digestive diseases
costing $1.6 billion annually in healthcare
costs and lost work days.
“With the obesity epidemic contributing to a
rise in NAFLD cases along with the aging HCV
patient population, cirrhosis among the
elderly is expected to become increasingly
prevalent,” says Mina Rakoski, M.D., a
transplant hepatology fellow in the
University of Michigan Medical School’s
Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology
and lead author of the study.
“Therefore, understanding the health and
economic burden on older cirrhotic patients,
their caregivers, and the health system is
extremely important.”
Rakoski and U-M colleagues identified 317
patients with cirrhosis and 951 age-matched
individuals without the disease from the
Health and Retirement Study and Medicare
claims files. Researchers assessed patients’
health status and informal caregiving,
measured by hours of care and associated
cost.
Study results reveal that patients with
cirrhosis were more likely to be Hispanic,
have less education, and have lower net
worth. Older cirrhotic patients had worse
self-reported health status and more medical
co-morbidities compared to those without the
disease. Utilization of health care
services, including physician visits,
nursing home stays and hospitalizations, was
more than double in those with cirrhosis
compared to non-cirrhotic peers.
Greater functional disability was also
significant among those with cirrhosis as
measured by activities of daily living and
instrumental activities of daily living.
Given their inability to perform common
everyday tasks, it is not surprising that
informal caregiving was much higher in
individuals with cirrhosis — twice the
number of informal caregiving hours per week
at an annual cost of $4,700 per person —
compared to their elderly counterparts
without the disease.
“Our population-based study confirms that
cirrhosis in the elderly poses a significant
burden to patients and their caregivers in
terms of health-related and economic costs,”
says Rakoski. “A greater focus on
comprehensive delivery of patient care by
involving caregivers and improving care
coordination will help to optimize disease
management for older cirrhotic patients.”
The authors recommend that future studies
should investigate the impact of functional
disability on outcomes such as hospital
readmission and mortality in older patients
with cirrhosis.
Hepatology is the official journal of the
American Association for the Study of Liver
Diseases.
Additional authors: All from University of
Michigan. Ryan J. McCammon, John D. Piette,
Theodore J. Iwashyna, Jorge A. Marrero, Anna
S. Lok, Kenneth M. Langa and Michael L.
Volk.
Journal citation: DOI:
10.1002/hep.24616
This study is published in Hepatology. Media
wishing to receive a PDF of this article may
contact
healthnews@wiley.com.
About U-M’s Division of Gastroenterology:
U-M is one of the largest gastroenterology
practices eatment of diseases of the
gastrointestinal tract and liver. Our
50-plus physicians are experts in the
diagnosis and treatment of all diseases of
the gastrointestinal system, from simple to
complex, including those of the esophagus,
stomach, small intestine, colon, rectum,
liver, gallbladder, pancreas and biliary
tract