Awarded/Presented
Tags
Bleeding Disorders Conference
Clinical Research/Clinical Trials
Researchers
Robert Sidonio, Ayesha Zia, Dana Fallaize

Objectives:

Von Willebrand disease (VWD) is a common inherited bleeding disorder, but awareness among healthcare professionals is low. Timely and proper diagnosis integral for reducing VWD burden, access to proper therapies, and avoidance of improper medication. Hence, we sought to estimate the prevalence of undiagnosed VWD among commercially insured patients in the United States with a recent history of bleeding events.

Methods:

Patients with a VWD diagnosis who were users of or candidates for von Willebrand factor were identified from the IMS PharMetrics Plus Database (2006─2015). We constructed a unary patient-finding model based on 12 prediagnosis variables that best defined this population, and applied to a set of undiagnosed patients with recent bleeding events from the same database. ‘Best fit’ (confidence level 5/6) and ‘good fit’ (confidence level 3/4) patients were identified. Prevalence of symptomatic undiagnosed VWD in the commercially insured population was estimated from the best-fit and good-fit population size (projection factor 10.4).

Summary:

Overall, 507 668 undiagnosed patients with recent bleeding events were identified (86% female, 14% male). Application of the VWD model identified 3318 best-fit and 37 163 good-fit patients; 91% of best-fit patients were females aged <46 years, with heavy menstrual bleeding the most common claim. Projection to the full commercially insured US population provided an estimate of 35 000 - 387 000 symptomatic, undiagnosed patients with VWD.

Conclusion:

There is a high prevalence of symptomatic, undiagnosed VWD (undiagnosed bleeding disorder patients that likely have VWD) in the commercially insured population. This data underscores the importance of improved disease education to both patients and the first line treaters, including OBGYN, emergency room, and pediatricians. Enhanced awareness of VWD symptoms and their impact, and of screening and testing procedures, may improve diagnosis of VWD and reduce the disease burden.