Automated Author ProfileNikolakis, Georgios
Nikolakis, Georgios
Current S-Index
Sum of Dataset Indices for all datasets
Average Dataset Index per Dataset
Average Dataset Index per dataset
Total Datasets
Total datasets for this author
Average FAIR Score
Average FAIR Score per dataset
Total Citations
Total citations to the author's datasets
Total Mentions
Total mentions of the author's datasets
S-Index Interpretation
The S-Index (Sharing Index) is a comprehensive metric that represents the cumulative impact of all your datasets. It is calculated as the sum of Dataset Index scores across all your claimed datasets.
What it means:
- A higher S-index indicates greater overall impact of your datasets relative to typical datasets in their fields of research
- The S-Index grows as you add more datasets or as existing datasets gain more citations and mentions
- It provides a single number to track your research data impact over time
Current S-Index: 2.1 (sum of 4 datasets Dataset Index scores)
More information here.
S-Index Over Time
Cumulative Citations Over Time
Cumulative Mentions Over Time
Datasets
Hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) is a chronic inflammatory skin disease affecting approximately 1% of the population. The patient journey through the German health care system leads to high disease burden and substantial treatment costs. The EsmAiL study showed that an innovative, interprofessional, multimodal care-concept reduces disease activity and burden of HS compared to standard care. This paper examines the costs of treating HS in Germany and compares them with those of the innovative care concept implemented in EsmAiL. EsmAiL was a two-arm, multicenter, prospective randomized controlled trial including 553 adults with HS. The study was registered in the German Clinical Trials Registry (DRKS00022135). The control group (CG) remained in standard care, whereas the intervention group (IG) was referred to specialized so-called ‘acne-inversa-centres (AiZ)’ where patients were treated with a structured, interdisciplinary approach. The present paper analyses the treatment costs for a subpopulation based on health insurance cost data from the two largest German health insurers. Quality-Adjusted Life Years (QALY) was assessed based on Dermatology Life Quality Index (DLQI). Total annual treatment costs per patient were €3,966.07 in standard care (n = 89) and €3,974.37 in the innovative care (n = 93). The costs per additional QALY amounted to €12,698.72 in the IG. Given the conventional and established threshold of €22,600 to €33,900 per QALY, the innovative treatment in AiZ proved to be cost-effective. Treatment costs of HS are substantial and increase with disease severity. The new form of care is cost-effective and is expected to decrease costs in the long run. A structured, multimodal form of care reduces costs in the treatment of Hidradenitis suppurativa compared to standard care.
Authors
- Heise, Marcus ;
- Staubach, Petra ;
- Nikolakis, Georgios ;
- Schollenberger, Lukas ;
- Mauch, Melanie ;
- Burckhardt, Marion ;
- Zamsheva, Marina ;
- Strobel, Alexandra ;
- Langer, Gero ;
- Bechara, Falk ;
- Kirschner, Uwe ;
- Hennig, Katharina ;
- Kunte, Christian ;
- Goebeler, Matthias ;
- Podda, Maurizio ;
- Grabbe, Stephan ;
- Schultheis, Michael
Hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) is a chronic inflammatory skin disease affecting approximately 1% of the population. The patient journey through the German health care system leads to high disease burden and substantial treatment costs. The EsmAiL study showed that an innovative, interprofessional, multimodal care-concept reduces disease activity and burden of HS compared to standard care. This paper examines the costs of treating HS in Germany and compares them with those of the innovative care concept implemented in EsmAiL. EsmAiL was a two-arm, multicenter, prospective randomized controlled trial including 553 adults with HS. The study was registered in the German Clinical Trials Registry (DRKS00022135). The control group (CG) remained in standard care, whereas the intervention group (IG) was referred to specialized so-called ‘acne-inversa-centres (AiZ)’ where patients were treated with a structured, interdisciplinary approach. The present paper analyses the treatment costs for a subpopulation based on health insurance cost data from the two largest German health insurers. Quality-Adjusted Life Years (QALY) was assessed based on Dermatology Life Quality Index (DLQI). Total annual treatment costs per patient were €3,966.07 in standard care (n = 89) and €3,974.37 in the innovative care (n = 93). The costs per additional QALY amounted to €12,698.72 in the IG. Given the conventional and established threshold of €22,600 to €33,900 per QALY, the innovative treatment in AiZ proved to be cost-effective. Treatment costs of HS are substantial and increase with disease severity. The new form of care is cost-effective and is expected to decrease costs in the long run. A structured, multimodal form of care reduces costs in the treatment of Hidradenitis suppurativa compared to standard care.
Authors
- Heise, Marcus ;
- Staubach, Petra ;
- Nikolakis, Georgios ;
- Schollenberger, Lukas ;
- Mauch, Melanie ;
- Burckhardt, Marion ;
- Zamsheva, Marina ;
- Strobel, Alexandra ;
- Langer, Gero ;
- Bechara, Falk ;
- Kirschner, Uwe ;
- Hennig, Katharina ;
- Kunte, Christian ;
- Goebeler, Matthias ;
- Podda, Maurizio ;
- Grabbe, Stephan ;
- Schultheis, Michael
Hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) is a chronic inflammatory skin disease affecting approximately 1% of the population. The patient journey through the German health care system leads to high disease burden and substantial treatment costs. The EsmAiL study showed that an innovative, interprofessional, multimodal care-concept reduces disease activity and burden of HS compared to standard care. This paper examines the costs of treating HS in Germany and compares them with those of the innovative care concept implemented in EsmAiL. EsmAiL was a two-arm, multicenter, prospective randomized controlled trial including 553 adults with HS. The study was registered in the German Clinical Trials Registry (DRKS00022135). The control group (CG) remained in standard care, whereas the intervention group (IG) was referred to specialized so-called ‘acne-inversa-centres (AiZ)’ where patients were treated with a structured, interdisciplinary approach. The present paper analyses the treatment costs for a subpopulation based on health insurance cost data from the two largest German health insurers. Quality-Adjusted Life Years (QALY) was assessed based on Dermatology Life Quality Index (DLQI). Total annual treatment costs per patient were €3,966.07 in standard care (n = 89) and €3,974.37 in the innovative care (n = 93). The costs per additional QALY amounted to €12,698.72 in the IG. Given the conventional and established threshold of €22,600 to €33,900 per QALY, the innovative treatment in AiZ proved to be cost-effective. Treatment costs of HS are substantial and increase with disease severity. The new form of care is cost-effective and is expected to decrease costs in the long run. A structured, multimodal form of care reduces costs in the treatment of Hidradenitis suppurativa compared to standard care.
Authors
- Heise, Marcus ;
- Staubach, Petra ;
- Nikolakis, Georgios ;
- Schollenberger, Lukas ;
- Mauch, Melanie ;
- Burckhardt, Marion ;
- Zamsheva, Marina ;
- Strobel, Alexandra ;
- Langer, Gero ;
- Bechara, Falk ;
- Kirschner, Uwe ;
- Hennig, Katharina ;
- Kunte, Christian ;
- Goebeler, Matthias ;
- Podda, Maurizio ;
- Grabbe, Stephan ;
- Schultheis, Michael
Hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) is a chronic inflammatory skin disease affecting approximately 1% of the population. The patient journey through the German health care system leads to high disease burden and substantial treatment costs. The EsmAiL study showed that an innovative, interprofessional, multimodal care-concept reduces disease activity and burden of HS compared to standard care. This paper examines the costs of treating HS in Germany and compares them with those of the innovative care concept implemented in EsmAiL. EsmAiL was a two-arm, multicenter, prospective randomized controlled trial including 553 adults with HS. The study was registered in the German Clinical Trials Registry (DRKS00022135). The control group (CG) remained in standard care, whereas the intervention group (IG) was referred to specialized so-called ‘acne-inversa-centres (AiZ)’ where patients were treated with a structured, interdisciplinary approach. The present paper analyses the treatment costs for a subpopulation based on health insurance cost data from the two largest German health insurers. Quality-Adjusted Life Years (QALY) was assessed based on Dermatology Life Quality Index (DLQI). Total annual treatment costs per patient were €3,966.07 in standard care (n = 89) and €3,974.37 in the innovative care (n = 93). The costs per additional QALY amounted to €12,698.72 in the IG. Given the conventional and established threshold of €22,600 to €33,900 per QALY, the innovative treatment in AiZ proved to be cost-effective. Treatment costs of HS are substantial and increase with disease severity. The new form of care is cost-effective and is expected to decrease costs in the long run. A structured, multimodal form of care reduces costs in the treatment of Hidradenitis suppurativa compared to standard care.
Authors
- Heise, Marcus ;
- Staubach, Petra ;
- Nikolakis, Georgios ;
- Schollenberger, Lukas ;
- Mauch, Melanie ;
- Burckhardt, Marion ;
- Zamsheva, Marina ;
- Strobel, Alexandra ;
- Langer, Gero ;
- Bechara, Falk ;
- Kirschner, Uwe ;
- Hennig, Katharina ;
- Kunte, Christian ;
- Goebeler, Matthias ;
- Podda, Maurizio ;
- Grabbe, Stephan ;
- Schultheis, Michael