Economic burden of eosinophilic esophagitis in the first year after diagnosis in Spain: A direct medical cost analysis

Author

Rodriguez Alcolado, Leticia

Aranda Reneo, Isaac

Casabona, Sergio

Pérez Martínez, Isabel

Guagnozzi, Danila

Gutiérrez Junquera, Carolina

Amorena, Edurne

Guardiola Arévalo, Antonio

de la Peña Negro, Luisa

Jhon, Leonardo Blas

López García Dionisio, Sandra

Fernández Pacheco, Jennifer

Barrio, Jesús

Fernández Fernández, Sonia

Betoré, Elena

de la Riva, Susana

Teruel Sánchez-Vegazo, Carlos

Rodríguez Oballe, Juan Armando

Naves, Juan Enrique

Bisso Zein, Juan

Carrión, Silvia

Suárez, Adolfo

Llerena Castro, Ronald

García Díaz, Alejandro

Nantes Castillejo, Óscar

Granja Navacerrada, Alicia

Perelló, Antonia

Álvarez García, Marta

Santander, Cecilio

Laserna Mendieta, Emilio

Oliva Moreno, Juan

Lucendo, Alfredo

Publication date

2025-11-17



Abstract

Background: Despite its increasing prevalence, the economic impact of eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE) in Europe is understudied and direct economic costs remain unknown. Objective: To assess contemporaneous direct medical costs during the first year after EoE diagnosis in Spain to identify key cost determinants and assess variables that could affect these costs. Methods: Observational study of Spanish participants in the EUREOS EoE CONNECT registry with incident EoE in 2017-2018. We assessed average costs/year in Euros for endoscopic procedures, out-patient visits, medication, emergency room visits and hospitalizations, 2018 being our base year. Official regional tariffs were used to estimate direct costs from a healthcare provider perspective; official price lists were used for drug therapies. Cost differences and determinants were assessed with multivariate models. Results: The mean annual direct cost of EoE per person among 302 patients (76.5% male, 77.5% adults) was €1,842.07 (SD €795.69). Endoscopic procedures accounted for 68% of this, followed by outpatient visits (15.9%) and drug prescriptions (10.8%). Cost was higher for pediatric compared to adult patients (€2,101.51 vs. €1,784.29, p < 0.01), for those with higher EREFS score (€1,979.36 vs. €1,794.49; p < 0.01), and in high-volume hospitals (€1,941.48 vs. €1,723.92; p = 0.02). Early response to first-line treatment reduced annual costs by -€368.95 (p < 0.01), by avoiding further medical procedures. Conclusion: First year after EoE diagnosis produces significant direct costs in Spain, mainly due to endoscopic procedures, which are reduced in early responders to first-line therapy. Research for non-invasive methods for EoE assessment and identifying predictors of response are, therefore, key.

Document Type

Article
Published version

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Administrative data; Cost of illness; Delivery of healthcare; Eosinophilic esophagitis; Health care costs/statistics & numerical data; Public health

Publisher

Springer Nature

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a https://doi.org/10.1007/s10198-025-01872-6

European Journal of Health Economics, 2025, [Online ahead of print]

Rights

cc-by-nc-nd, (c) Leticia Rodriguez Alcolado et al., 2025

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

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