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The annual economic burden of respiratory syncytial virus in adults in the United States
Carrico, J., Hicks, K. A., Wilson, E., Panozzo, C. A., & Ghaswalla, P. (2024). The annual economic burden of respiratory syncytial virus in adults in the United States. The Journal of Infectious Diseases, 230(2), e342-e352. https://doi.org/10.1093/infdis/jiad559
Background Current estimates of the economic burden of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) are needed for policymakers to evaluate adult RSV vaccination strategies.Methods A cost-of-illness model was developed to estimate the annual societal burden of RSV in US adults aged >= 60 years. Additional analyses were conducted to estimate the burden of hospitalized RSV in all adults aged 50-59 years and in adults aged 18-49 years with potential RSV risk factors.Results Among US adults aged >= 60 years, the model estimated 4.0 million annual RSV cases (95% uncertainty interval [UI], 2.7-5.6 million) and an annual economic burden of $6.6 billion (95% UI, $3.1-$12.9 billion; direct medical costs, $2.9 billion; indirect costs, $3.7 billion). The 4% of RSV cases that were hospitalized contributed to 94% of direct medical costs. Additional analyses estimated $422 million in annual hospitalization costs among all adults aged 50-59 years. Among adults aged 18-49 years with RSV risk factors, annual per capita burden was highest among people with congestive heart failure at $51 100 per 1000 people.Discussion The economic burden of RSV is substantial among adults aged >= 50 years and among adults aged 18-49 years with RSV risk factors, underscoring the need for preventive interventions for these populations.RSV cases in US adults aged >= 60 years were estimated to contribute a total annual cost of $6.6 billion (95% uncertainty interval, $3.1-$12.9 billion), including $2.9 billion in direct costs and $3.7 billion in indirect costs.