Chandran Arthi, Bonafede Machaon K, Nigam Sonali, Saltiel-Berzin Rita, Hirsch Laurence J, Lahue Betsy J
Senior Director, Health Economics and Outcomes Research, Becton Dickinson.
Director of Outcomes Research, Truven Health Analytics, Cambridge, MA.
Am Health Drug Benefits. 2015 May;8(3):148-58.
Type 2 diabetes mellitus is a chronic metabolic disorder that poses a significant economic burden on the US healthcare system associated with direct and indirect medical costs, loss of productivity, and premature mortality.
To determine whether increased adherence to therapy among patients with type 2 diabetes who use an insulin pen is associated with reduced healthcare costs, and to describe the overall healthcare costs of patients with type 2 diabetes.
This retrospective claims database analysis used the Truven Health MarketScan Commercial and Medicare Supplemental databases to identify patients diagnosed with type 2 diabetes with at least 1 insulin pen prescription claim between January 2006 and September 2010. Insulin pen adherence was measured using the medication possession ratio (MPR). The cost outcomes included all-cause and type 2 diabetes-related costs by type of service (ie, inpatient, outpatient medical, outpatient pharmacy), which were calculated in 2011 US dollars. Insulin adherence and overall healthcare costs were evaluated over the 12-month postindex period.
A total of 32,361 patients met the study inclusion criteria, with an average MPR of 0.63 (standard deviation [SD], 0.29). Overall, patients with type 2 diabetes who used an insulin pen had an average annual healthcare cost of $19,612, which was driven by inpatient costs (37.2%) and outpatient pharmacy costs (24.4%). There is a significant difference in the average annual per-patient healthcare expenditures between the least adherent group (MPR <0.20; 11.0% of patients) and the most adherent group (MPR >0.80; 34.6% of patients) $26,310 versus $23,839, respectively (P = .007). Patients with the greatest insulin adherence had higher overall pharmacy costs than patients with the lowest insulin adherence ($10,174 vs $5395, respectively; P <.001).
The total healthcare expenditures of patients with type 2 diabetes who utilized insulin pens decreased with improvement in adherence, suggesting that higher rates of medication adherence may present an opportunity to curb healthcare costs in insulin pen users. The average sample MPR for our study population was 0.63 (SD, 0.29), indicating that insulin adherence continues to be a challenge for successful diabetes management. More research is needed to better characterize the relationship between medication adherence and healthcare costs among insulin users with type 2 diabetes and to identify the key drivers of adherence among this patient group.
2型糖尿病是一种慢性代谢紊乱疾病,给美国医疗保健系统带来了巨大的经济负担,涉及直接和间接医疗费用、生产力损失以及过早死亡。
确定使用胰岛素笔的2型糖尿病患者治疗依从性的提高是否与医疗费用降低相关,并描述2型糖尿病患者的总体医疗费用。
这项回顾性索赔数据库分析使用了Truven Health MarketScan商业和医疗保险补充数据库,以识别在2006年1月至2010年9月期间被诊断为2型糖尿病且至少有1次胰岛素笔处方索赔的患者。使用药物持有率(MPR)来衡量胰岛素笔的依从性。成本结果包括按服务类型(即住院、门诊医疗、门诊药房)划分的全因和2型糖尿病相关成本,这些成本以2011年美元计算。在索引后12个月期间评估胰岛素依从性和总体医疗费用。
共有32361名患者符合研究纳入标准,平均MPR为0.63(标准差[SD],0.29)。总体而言,使用胰岛素笔的2型糖尿病患者的平均年度医疗费用为19612美元,其中住院费用(37.2%)和门诊药房费用(24.4%)占主导。依从性最低的组(MPR<0.20;占患者的11.0%)和依从性最高的组(MPR>0.80;占患者的34.6%)之间,平均每年每位患者的医疗支出存在显著差异,分别为26310美元和23839美元(P = 0.007)。胰岛素依从性最高的患者的总体药房费用高于胰岛素依从性最低的患者(分别为10174美元和5395美元;P<0.001)。
使用胰岛素笔的2型糖尿病患者的总医疗支出随着依从性的提高而降低,这表明更高的药物依从率可能为控制胰岛素笔使用者的医疗费用提供机会。我们研究人群的平均样本MPR为0.63(SD,0.29),这表明胰岛素依从性仍然是成功管理糖尿病的一个挑战。需要更多的研究来更好地描述2型糖尿病胰岛素使用者中药物依从性与医疗费用之间的关系,并确定该患者群体中依从性的关键驱动因素。