1 Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, and Veterans Affairs of San Diego Healthcare System, San Diego, California.
2 Veterans Affairs San Diego Healthcare System, San Diego, California.
J Manag Care Spec Pharm. 2017 Mar;23(3):318-326. doi: 10.18553/jmcp.2017.23.3.318.
In 2012 U.S. diabetes costs were estimated to be $245 billion, with $176 billion related to direct diabetes treatment and associated complications. Although a few studies have reported positive glycemic and economic benefits for diabetes patients treated under primary care physician (PCP)-pharmacist collaborative practice models, no studies have evaluated the cost-effectiveness of an endocrinologist-pharmacist collaborative practice model treating complex diabetes patients versus usual PCP care for similar patients.
To estimate the cost-effectiveness and cost benefit of a collaborative endocrinologist-pharmacist Diabetes Intense Medical Management (DIMM) "Tune-Up" clinic for complex diabetes patients versus usual PCP care from 3 perspectives (clinic, health system, payer) and time frames.
Data from a retrospective cohort study of adult patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) and glycosylated hemoglobin A1c (A1c) ≥ 8% who were referred to the DIMM clinic at the Veterans Affairs San Diego Health System were used for cost analyses against a comparator group of PCP patients meeting the same criteria. The DIMM clinic took more time with patients, compared with usual PCP visits. It provided personalized care in three 60-minute visits over 6 months, combining medication therapy management with patient-specific diabetes education, to achieve A1c treatment goals before discharge back to the PCP. Data for DIMM versus PCP patients were used to evaluate cost-effectiveness and cost benefit. Analyses included incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) at 6 months, 3-year estimated total medical costs avoided and return on investment (ROI), absolute risk reduction of complications, resultant medical costs, and quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) over 10 years.
Base case ICER results indicated that from the clinic perspective, the DIMM clinic costs $21 per additional percentage point of A1c improvement and $115-$164 per additional patient at target A1c goal level compared with the PCP group. From the health system perspective, medical cost avoidance due to improved A1c was $8,793 per DIMM patient versus $3,506 per PCP patient (P = 0.009), resulting in an ROI of $9.01 per dollar spent. From the payer perspective, DIMM patients had estimated lower total medical costs, a greater number of QALYs gained, and appreciable risk reductions for diabetes-related complications over 2-, 5- and 10-year time frames, indicating that the DIMM clinic was dominant. Sensitivity analyses indicated results were robust, and overall conclusions did not change appreciably when key parameters (including DIMM clinic effectiveness and cost) were varied within plausible ranges.
The DIMM clinic endocrinologist-pharmacist collaborative practice model, in which the pharmacist spent more time providing personalized care, improved glycemic control at a minimal cost per additional A1c benefit gained and produced greater cost avoidance, appreciable ROI, reduction in long-term complication risk, and lower cost for a greater gain in QALYs. Overall, the DIMM clinic represents an advanced pharmacy practice model with proven clinical and economic benefits from multiple perspectives for patients with T2DM and high medication and comorbidity complexity.
No outside funding supported this study. The authors declare no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. Preliminary versions of the study data were presented in abstract form at the American Pharmacists Association Annual Meeting & Exposition; March 27, 2015; San Diego, California, and the Academy of Managed Care Pharmacy Annual Meeting; April 21, 2016; San Francisco, California. Study concept and design were contributed by Hirsch, Bounthavong, and Edelman, along with Morello and Morreale. Arjmand, Ourth, Ha, Cadiz, and Zimmerman collected the data. Data interpretation was performed by Ha, Morreale, and Morello, along with Cadiz, Ourth, and Hirsch. The manuscript was written primarily by Hirsch and Zimmerman, along with Arjamand, Ourth, and Morello, and was revised by Hirsch and Cadiz, along with Bounthavong, Ha, Morreale, and Morello.
2012 年,美国糖尿病的花费估计为 2450 亿美元,其中 1760 亿美元与直接的糖尿病治疗和相关并发症有关。尽管有几项研究报告了在初级保健医生(PCP)-药剂师合作实践模式下治疗糖尿病患者的积极血糖和经济效益,但没有研究评估内分泌学家-药剂师合作实践模式治疗复杂糖尿病患者的成本效益与类似患者的常规 PCP 护理相比。
从诊所、医疗系统和支付方三个角度和时间框架估计复杂糖尿病患者的内分泌学家-药剂师糖尿病强化医疗管理(DIMM)“调整”诊所与常规 PCP 护理相比的成本效益和成本效益。
使用退伍军人事务部圣地亚哥卫生系统 DIMM 诊所的 2 型糖尿病(T2DM)和糖化血红蛋白 A1c(A1c)≥8%的成年患者的回顾性队列研究数据进行成本分析,与符合相同标准的 PCP 患者进行比较。与常规 PCP 就诊相比,DIMM 诊所与患者的就诊时间更长。它通过三次 60 分钟的就诊,结合药物治疗管理和患者特定的糖尿病教育,在出院回 PCP 之前达到 A1c 治疗目标,提供个性化的护理。使用 DIMM 与 PCP 患者的数据来评估成本效益和成本效益。分析包括 6 个月、3 年估计的总医疗费用节省和投资回报率(ROI)、并发症风险降低的绝对幅度、由此产生的医疗费用和 10 年内的质量调整生命年(QALY)的增量成本效果比(ICER)。
基础病例 ICER 结果表明,从诊所角度来看,与 PCP 组相比,DIMM 诊所每增加一个百分点的 A1c 改善,每增加一个患者达到目标 A1c 目标水平,成本增加 21 美元。从医疗系统的角度来看,由于 A1c 改善而节省的医疗费用为每个 DIMM 患者 8793 美元,每个 PCP 患者 3506 美元(P=0.009),产生 9.01 美元的投资回报率。从支付方的角度来看,与 PCP 患者相比,DIMM 患者估计的总医疗费用更低,获得的 QALY 更多,并且在 2 年、5 年和 10 年的时间范围内,糖尿病相关并发症的风险显著降低,表明 DIMM 诊所是主导的。敏感性分析表明,结果是稳健的,当关键参数(包括 DIMM 诊所的效果和成本)在合理范围内变化时,总体结论没有明显变化。
DIMM 诊所内分泌学家-药剂师合作实践模式,其中药剂师花费更多的时间提供个性化的护理,以最低的每额外 A1c 改善成本获得血糖控制,并产生更大的成本节约、可观的投资回报率、降低长期并发症风险和更高的 QALY 获得更大的收益。总的来说,对于 T2DM 患者和高药物和合并症复杂性患者,DIMM 诊所代表了一种具有经过验证的临床和经济效益的先进药学实践模式,从多个角度来看都是如此。
本研究没有外部资金支持。作者声明没有与研究、作者或发表本文有关的潜在利益冲突。研究数据的初步版本以摘要形式在美国药师协会年会暨博览会上提交;2015 年 3 月 27 日,加利福尼亚州圣地亚哥;以及管理式医疗药师协会年会;2016 年 4 月 21 日,加利福尼亚州旧金山。Hirsch、Bounthavong 和 Edelman 以及 Morello 和 Morreale 对研究概念和设计做出了贡献。Arjmand、Ourth、Ha、Cadiz 和 Zimmerman 收集了数据。数据解释由 Ha、Morreale 和 Morello 以及 Cadiz、Ourth 和 Hirsch 进行。手稿主要由 Hirsch 和 Zimmerman 以及 Arjmand、Ourth 和 Morello 撰写,并由 Hirsch 和 Cadiz 以及 Bounthavong、Ha、Morreale 和 Morello 进行了修订。