PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Manathip Osiri AU - Andreas Maetzel AU - Peter Tugwell TI - The economic burden of rheumatoid arthritis in a developing nation: results from a one-year prospective cohort study in Thailand. DP - 2007 Jan 01 TA - The Journal of Rheumatology PG - 57--63 VI - 34 IP - 1 4099 - http://www.jrheum.org/content/34/1/57.short 4100 - http://www.jrheum.org/content/34/1/57.full SO - J Rheumatol2007 Jan 01; 34 AB - OBJECTIVE: To assess annual direct and indirect costs in a prospective cohort of patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) in Thailand from the societal perspective. METHODS: Data on costs and intangible losses were prospectively collected at regular intervals over a one-year period from 158 RA patients who attended a major tertiary care facility in Bangkok, Thailand. Direct medical, direct nonmedical, indirect, and total costs were estimated according to patients' respective health insurance conditions and converted to 2001 US dollars using published purchasing power parity estimates. Sensitivity analyses were performed and the predictors of costs and intangible losses were investigated. RESULTS: The average societal cost of RA was estimated to be 2682 US dollars, 41.4% of patients' average annual income. Average direct and indirect costs were estimated to amount to 2135 US dollars and 547 US dollars per patient per year, respectively. Seventy-three patients (46.2%) experienced at least one event of intangible losses and 46 patients (29.1%) had decreased earnings ability because of RA. Poor physical function, joint deformity, high number of disease modifying antirheumatic drugs, and steroid use contributed to higher costs and presence of intangible losses. CONCLUSION: RA consumes a significant proportion of patients' annual average incomes and poses a significant economic burden to society. Since RA mainly affects a working-age population, early and timely treatment of this disease can improve both the suffering and the economic productivity of patients in Thailand.