Overview
Clinical background
Cryptococcosis in kidney transplant recipients is uncommon but potentially catastrophic. When transmission occurs through the donor, it often presents early after transplant, may involve the central nervous system, and is associated with substantial morbidity and mortality despite treatment.
The costs of cryptococcus after solid organ transplant are unclear. Although studies have quantified the cost of a single hospitalization for cryptococcus, no study to date has estimated the total excess cost of care due to cryptococcus.
What this analysis does
This project uses the United States Renal Data System to analyze the impact of cryptococcus on costs.
Methods
We selected cryptococcus cases based on the following inclusion criteria:
- Age 18 or greater
- Prior kidney transplant
- ICD9 or ICD10 codes for cryptococcus (2 outpatient or 1 inpatient)
- One year of Medicare primary coverage lead-in
Controls were matched 2:1 to cases based on risk-set sampling on the following:
- Time since transplant
- Diabetes
- HIV/AIDS
- Age within 10 years
- Sampling date for control within 3 years of sampling date for case
Institutional claims data were abstracted as well as Physician/Supplier line-item data.
Results
Pending
Abstracts/manuscripts
This analysis has yet to be published to date.