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Dive into the research topics where Hemal Shah is active.

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Featured researches published by Hemal Shah.


Respiratory Medicine | 2008

The economic burden of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) in a U.S. Medicare population

Joseph Menzin; Luke Boulanger; Jeno P. Marton; Lisa Guadagno; Homa Dastani; Riad Dirani; Amy L. Phillips; Hemal Shah

RATIONALE Although the economic burden of COPD has gained attention in recent years, data on the costs of COPD among U.S. Medicare beneficiaries are lacking. METHODS This study used administrative claims and eligibility records from a large U.S. multi-state Medicare managed care database. Study patients were 65+ years of age with paid claims during 2004. The COPD cohort comprised patients with 1+ inpatient/ER claims or 2+ outpatient claims (>30 days apart) for COPD (ICD-9-CM codes 491.xx, 492.x, 496). The comparison cohort included patients without COPD matched 3:1 to the COPD cohort on age, sex, enrollment months, and Medicare plan. Excess costs of COPD were estimated as the difference in overall health plan payments between the two cohorts during 2004. Attributable costs were calculated using medical claims with listed diagnoses of COPD or other respiratory-related conditions and pharmacy claims for respiratory medications. RESULTS A total of 8370 patients were included in the COPD cohort and were matched to 25,110 comparison cohort patients. For both groups, mean (SD) age was 78 (8) years, 54% were female, and duration of eligibility was 11 (2) months. COPD patients were more likely to utilize healthcare services and had excess total healthcare costs about


Clinical Therapeutics | 2000

Aspirin Plus Extended-Release Dipyridamole or Clopidogrel Compared with Aspirin Monotherapy for the Prevention of Recurrent Ischemic Stroke: A Cost-Effectiveness Analysis

Hemal Shah; Kathleen Gondek

20,500 higher (P<0.0001) than the comparison cohort. Comorbidities were high in the COPD cohort, accounting for 46% of the observed excess cost. The attributable cost of COPD averaged about


Clinical Therapeutics | 2001

Initiation of nonselective alpha1-antagonist therapy and occurrence of hypotension-related adverse events among men with benign prostatic hyperplasia: a retrospective cohort study

Elizabeth A. Chrischilles; Linda M. Rubenstein; Jingdong Chao; Karl J. Kreder; Daniel Gilden; Hemal Shah

6,300; other respiratory-related costs averaged about


COPD: Journal of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease | 2012

The Impact of COPD on Quality of Life, Productivity Loss, and Resource Use among the Elderly United States Workforce

Marco DiBonaventura; Ryne Paulose-Ram; Jun Su; Margaret McDonald; Kelly H. Zou; Jan-Samuel Wagner; Hemal Shah

4,400. CONCLUSION In this U.S. Medicare managed care population, COPD posed a substantial burden in terms of both respiratory-related and total healthcare costs. A comparison of these cost-of-illness estimates to those for elderly COPD patients in other countries would be of great interest, given the increasing age of populations in most Western countries.


Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine | 2007

A retrospective analysis of disability and its related costs among employees with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

Theodore Darkow; Pamela J. Kadlubek; Hemal Shah; Amy L. Phillips; Jeno P. Marton

OBJECTIVE The goal of this health economic analysis was to asses the cost-effectiveness of a fixed combination of aspirin plus extended-release dipyridamole (ASA/ER-DP) or clopidogrel compared with ASA monotherapy for prevention of recurrent ischemic stroke. BACKGROUND The second European Stroke Prevention Study (ASA/ESPS-2), a large-scale clinical trial, demonstrated that a new therapy--a fixed combination of ASA/ER-DP--is more effective than ASA monotherapy for the prevention of recurrent ischemic stroke. METHODS We used data from ESPS-2 to create a health economic model that estimates the incremental cost and cost-effectiveness of ASA/ER-DP during the 2-year time frame after an ischemic stroke. The model was developed from a payor perspective. The analysis used direct cost estimates for stroke from a Medicare claims database analysis. Efficacy data were obtained from clinical trials to determine the incremental cost per stroke averted for ASA/ER-DP or clopidogrel versus ASA. Sensitivity analyses also were conducted to test the reliability and robustness of the model. RESULTS The results of the analysis demonstrated that ASA/ER-DP was cost-effective compared with ASA monotherapy for the secondary prevention of stroke, with a cost-effectiveness ratio of


International Journal of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease | 2012

The burden of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease among employed adults

Marco DiBonaventura; Ryne Paulose-Ram; Jun Su; Margaret McDonald; Kelly H. Zou; Jan-Samuel Wagner; Hemal Shah

28,472. The model remained robust over a range of assumptions and cost estimates. Clopidogrel, however, was not cost-effective compared with ASA (cost per stroke averted,


Vascular Health and Risk Management | 2010

Costs and outcomes of noncardioembolic ischemic stroke in a managed care population.

Nicole M. Engel-Nitz; Stephen Sander; Caroline R Harley; Gabriel Gomez Rey; Hemal Shah

161,316) in either the base-case analysis or any of the sensitivity analyses. CONCLUSION ASA/ER-DP thus offers a cost-effective alternative to ASA monotherapy for the prevention of recurrent ischemic stroke.


Value in Health | 2008

The Direct Medical Costs of Undiagnosed Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Douglas W. Mapel; Scott Robinson; Homa Dastani; Hemal Shah; Amy L. Phillips; Eva Lydick

BACKGROUND Treatment of benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) with nonselective alpha1 antagonists such as terazosin, doxazosin, and prazosin results in blood pressure reduction due to vasodilation. OBJECTIVE Using claims data from a large Medigap plan, we examined the effect of initiating nonselective alpha1-antagonist therapy on the incidence of hypotension-related adverse events likely to be associated with vascular alpha-adrenoreceptor antagonism in patients with BPH. METHODS Medical and prescription claims data were obtained from the MEDSTAT Group for 53,824 men with a diagnosis code for BPH during the study period (January 1995-December 1997). We examined the rate of possible hypotension-related adverse events (diagnosis codes for hypotension, syncope, dizziness, fractures, and other injuries) per 10,000 person-days for men who began therapy with alpha1 antagonists and for a random sample of nonusers, stratified by prior use of other antihypertensive agents. RESULTS After adjusting for baseline differences in event rates, those who initiated alpha1-antagonist therapy (n = 1564) had a significantly greater increase in hypotension-related adverse-event rates in the 4 months after initiation (vs the 4 months before initiation) than randomly selected nonusers (n = 8641) (increase of 1.82 vs decrease of 0.02 events per 10,000 person-days among those not taking antihypertensive agents; increase of 0.94 vs 0.69 events per 10,000 person-days among those taking other antihypertensive agents; P < 0.01). This increase began earlier and lasted longer among patients taking other antihypertensive agents. Those who discontinued their alpha1 antagonist had a higher rate of hypotensive events at baseline than those who did not (5.09 vs 3.19 events per 10,000 person-days among those using other antihypertensive agents; 3.62 vs 2.27 events per 10,000 person-days among those not using other antihypertensive agents; P < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS Initiation of nonselective alpha1-antagonist therapy for the treatment of BPH increases the risk of a cluster of clinical events consistent with vascular alpha-adrenoreceptor antagonism. This effect is seen during a 4-month period around the initiation date. Prior initiation of other antihypertensive medication increases this effect. Urologists should consult with a patients primary care physician about use of other antihypertensive agents before initiating nonselective alpha1-antagonist therapy for BPH.


Current Medical Research and Opinion | 2010

Impact of persistence with antiplatelet therapy on recurrent ischemic stroke and predictors of nonpersistence among ischemic stroke survivors

James P. Burke; Stephen Sander; Hemal Shah; Victoria Zarotsky; Henry J. Henk

Abstract To address the gap in knowledge about the impact of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) on older working adults, this study examined quality of life, worker productivity, and healthcare resource utilization among employed adults aged 65 and older with and without COPD. Among 2009 National Health and Wellness Survey (a cross-sectional, internet-based survey representative of the US adult population) respondents, employed adults aged 65 years and older, with COPD (n = 297) and without COPD (n = 3061), were included in analyses. Impact of self-reported COPD diagnosis on mean quality of life (using health utilities and mental, MCS, and physical, PCS, component summary scores from SF-12v2), work productivity and activity impairment (using the WPAI questionnaire), and resource use were examined. Adjusting for demographic and health characteristics such as co-morbidities (weighted to project to the US population) in regression models (linear, negative binomial, or logistic, as appropriate given the outcome measure), older workers with COPD reported significantly lower MCS (52.1 vs. 53.4, p < .05), PCS (40.3 vs. 47.2, p < .05), and health utilities (0.72 vs. 0.79, p < .05) than those without COPD, and significantly greater percentages of impairment while at work (presenteeism) (12.6% vs. 8.7%, p < .0001), overall work impairment (absenteeism and presenteeism combined) (19.3% vs. 10.0%, p < .05), and impairment in daily activities (23.9% vs. 13.7%, p < .05). There were no significant differences in absenteeism or healthcare use. Quality of life and work productivity suffered among employed adults aged 65 years and older with COPD, emphasizing the need for disease management in this population.


Patient Preference and Adherence | 2011

Outcomes associated with initiation of tiotropium or fluticasone/salmeterol in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease

Rachel Halpern; Christine L. Baker; Jun Su; Kimberly B Woodruff; Ryne Paulose-Ram; Victoria Porter; Hemal Shah

Objective: The objective of this study was to examine the frequency and cost of disability among actively employed individuals with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Methods: The authors conducted a retrospective analysis of disability and claims data. Employees 40 to 63 years old with a diagnosis of COPD between January 1, 2001, and March 31, 2004, were identified, and controls were matched 2:1 to these subjects. Likelihood and cost of disability were compared between cohorts. Results: A total of 2696 controls were matched to 1349 COPD subjects. Mean age was 52 years, and cohorts were approximately 50% male. A significantly (P < 0.0001) greater proportion of COPD subjects used short-term (21.8% vs 7.0%), long-term (2.4% vs 0.4%), or any disability (22.8% vs 7.3%). Associated costs were also higher among COPD subjects (

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Jun Su

Boehringer Ingelheim

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