Abstract
Background: Autoimmune hemolytic anemia (AIHA) is a condition in which the immune system erroneously attacks and damages red blood cells. While the epidemiology of AIHA has been examined in various European and Asian nations (Hansen 2020; Kao 2025), there is limited data available from the United States (US). Using US insurance claims data, this research aimed to determine the prevalence and demographic characteristics of AIHA over a five-year span.
Methods: Five databases were used: Merative MarketScan Commercial Claims and Encounters; Optum's de-identified Clinformatics® Data Mart Database; Closed and Open claims sourced through HealthVerity; Merative MarketScan Medicare Supplemental Database; Merative MarketScan Multi-State Medicaid. AIHA was defined by ICD-10 diagnosis codes D59.1x in a given calendar year and a second code within 365 days prior. Annual prevalence in years 2019 – 2023 was calculated among people with insurance enrollment for at least 6 months in the calendar year. Annual prevalence was stratified by age group, sex, and prescription fill for an AIHA-related treatment (systemic steroids, immunosuppressants [azathioprine, mycophenolate, cyclosporin, cyclophosphamide, danazol, bortezomib, rituximab], splenectomy) in the calendar year. Extrapolation of prevalence rates for commercial and government assistance insurance to the US population for 2023 was implemented by age and sex-standardization to the US Census population. For data sources that included both commercial and government assistance insurance, patients aged <65 years were analyzed as commercial insurance and aged ≥65 years as government assistance.
Results: AIHA prevalence in 2023 across databases ranged from 2.7 to 4.3 per 100,000 for ages <18 years; 4.2 to 9.4 per 100,000 for ages 18 – 34 years; 8.2 to 11.8 per 100,000 for ages 35 – 49 years; 15.4 to 23.9 per 100,000 for ages 50 – 64 years; 26.6 to 37.0 per 100,000 for ages 65 – 74 years; and 30.6 to 61.2 per 100,000 for age 75 years and older. Across databases and over time, the proportion of AIHA patients that were female was 55% – 67%. Across all databases, in year 2023, half (44% - 55%) of patients received any AIHA-related treatment, out of which one third (26%-34%) received systemic steroids, less than one quarter (9% – 17%) received rituximab, and one third (25% – 31%) received a different immunosuppressant. Compared to patients with commercial insurance, Medicaid-insured patients had lower AIHA-related treatment utilization, whereas Medicare-insured patients had higher utilization. Within age group and sex and by insurance type, low and high estimates of prevalence were used to define a range of prevalence. After standardization to the 2023 US Census population, the estimated prevalence in 2023 ranged from 38,459 to 57,235 patients diagnosed with AIHA, corresponding to prevalence rates of 11.6 to 17.3 per 100,000. This marked an increase from 2019 US Census-standardized estimates of 32,777 to 48,482, with corresponding prevalence rates of 10.1 to 14.9 per 100,000.
Discussion: AIHA prevalence was higher in older age groups, with a peak prevalence in ages 65 and older. Prevalence increased approximately 15% over a 5-year interval and was notably higher in patients with commercial health insurance compared to government insurance programs, which may in part be due to the older age of the Medicare population. Fewer than half of patients received an AIHA-related treatment in 2023, which could reflect heterogeneity in disease severity necessitating treatment, in addition to the relapse-remitting nature of AIHA whereby patients experience remission for periods of time. Additionally, insurance claims do not specify an indication for treatment nor a reason for discontinuation; some treatments could have been prescribed for an underlying condition contributing to AIHA. Finally, prevalence extrapolation assumes Americans without health insurance are diagnosed with AIHA at the same rate as those with insurance, which may slightly overestimate the total number of diagnosed patients.Conclusion: AIHA prevalence in this study was consistent with estimates from European countries and has been increasing in recent years, providing evidence of consistent disease epidemiology across several geographies.
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