P-35. Long-Term Healthcare Utilization and Expenditures for Infants with Invasive Bacterial Infections During Birth Hospitalizations
Kristen Noble, Katharina Schley, Lisa Abramovitz, Sarah J Willis, Kyla hayford, Jennifer Moisi, Derek Weycker

TL;DR
This study finds that infants with bacterial infections at birth have higher healthcare costs and use for a year after discharge compared to healthy infants.
Contribution
The study provides new empirical evidence on the long-term healthcare costs and utilization associated with bacterial infections in newborns.
Findings
Infants with bacterial meningitis had $218,464 higher mean expenditures than matched comparators.
Infants with sepsis had $39,257 higher mean expenditures than matched comparators.
Acute-care hospitalizations largely drove the increased healthcare utilization and costs.
Abstract
Invasive bacterial infections among newborns are associated with significant morbidity, mortality, and economic costs. While most newborns fully recover following the acute phase of illness, some develop long-term complications that require additional medical care. The objective of this real-world study was to estimate long-term healthcare utilization and expenditures among infants with bacterial meningitis or sepsis during their birth hospitalizations. A retrospective cohort design and the PharMetrics Plus Healthcare Claims Database (01/01/16-04/30/24) were employed. Study population comprised infants who, during their birth hospitalizations, had diagnosis codes for meningitis or sepsis due to bacterial pathogens as well as comparison infants without evidence of these conditions matched (1:1) on birth gestational age, birth weight, sex, high-risk conditions, and an estimated…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeonatal and Maternal Infections · Preterm Birth and Chorioamnionitis · Bacterial Infections and Vaccines
