TY - JOUR T1 - Disease burden and costs for patients with hip and knee osteoarthritis and chronic moderate-to-severe refractory pain on treatment with strong opioids in Spain JO - Reumatología Clínica (English Edition) T2 - AU - Sicras-Mainar,Antoni AU - Rejas-Gutierrez,Javier AU - Vargas-Negrín,Francisco AU - Tornero-Tornero,Juan Carlos AU - Sicras-Navarro,Aram AU - Lizarraga,Isabel SN - 21735743 M3 - 10.1016/j.reumae.2022.02.007 DO - 10.1016/j.reumae.2022.02.007 UR - https://www.reumatologiaclinica.org/en-disease-burden-costs-for-patients-articulo-S2173574323000096 AB - Introduction and objectivesTo determine the disease burden and costs in patients with hip or knee OA and chronic moderate-to-severe refractory pain, receiving strong opioids in Spain. Materials and methodsThis was a 36-month longitudinal secondary analysis of the real-word OPIOIDS study. Patients aged ≥18 years with hip or knee OA and chronic moderate-to-severe refractory pain receiving strong opioids were considered. The disease burden included analgesia assessments (NRS scale), cognitive functioning (MMSE scale), basic activities of daily living (Barthel index), and comorbidities (severity and frequency). Costs due to the use of healthcare resources and productivity loss were estimated. Results2832 patients were analyzed; age was 72.0 years (SD=14.3), 76.8% were women. Patients had mainly been treated with fentanyl (n=979; 37.6%), tapentadol (n=625; 24.0%), oxycodone (n=572; 22.0%), and buprenorphine (n=425; 16.3%). Pain intensity decreased by 1 point (13.7%), with a 2.6-point decline in the cognitive scale (14.3%, with a 5.3%-increase in patients with cognitive deficit) over a mean treatment period of 384.6 days (SD: 378.8). Barthel scores decreased significantly yielding to a slightly increase in proportion of patients with severe-to-total dependency; 1.2%–2.9%. In the first year of treatment, average healthcare costs were €2013/patient, whereas the average productivity loss cost was €12,227/working-active patient. Discussion and conclusionsStrong opioids resulted in high healthcare costs with a limited reduction in pain, an increase in cognitive deficit, and a slight increase of patients with severe to total dependency over 36 months of treatment. ER -