Song Young Shin, Koo Bo Kyung, Kim Sang Wan, Yi Ka Hee, Shin Kichul, Moon Min Kyong
Department of Internal Medicine, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.
Department of Internal Medicine, Seoul Metropolitan Government Boramae Medical Center, Seoul, Korea.
Diabetes Metab J. 2018 Feb;42(1):28-42. doi: 10.4093/dmj.2018.42.1.28. Epub 2017 Sep 28.
In Korea, the costs associated with self-monitoring of blood glucose (SMBG) for patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) under insulin treatment have been reimbursed since November 2015. We investigated whether this new reimbursement program for SMBG has improved the glycemic control in the beneficiaries of this policy.
Among all adult T2DM patients with ≥3 months of reimbursement (n=854), subjects without any changes in anti-hyperglycemic agents during the study period were selected. The improvement of glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) was defined as an absolute reduction in HbA1c ≥0.6% or an HbA1c level at follow-up <7%.
HbA1c levels significantly decreased from 8.5%±1.3% to 8.2%±1.2% during the follow-up (P<0.001) in all the study subjects (n=409). Among them, 35.5% (n=145) showed a significant improvement in HbA1c. Subjects covered under the Medical Aid system showed a higher prevalence of improvement in HbA1c than those with medical insurance (52.2% vs. 33.3%, respectively, P=0.012). In the improvement group, the baseline HbA1c (P<0.001), fasting C-peptide (P=0.016), and daily dose of insulin/body weight (P=0.024) showed significant negative correlations with the degree of HbA1c change. Multivariate analysis showed that subjects in the Medical Aid system were about 2.5-fold more likely to improve in HbA1c compared to those with medical insurance (odds ratio, 2.459; 95% confidence interval, 1.138 to 5.314; P=0.022).
The reimbursement for SMBG resulted in a significant improvement in HbA1c in T2DM subjects using insulin, which was more prominent in subjects with poor glucose control at baseline or covered under the Medical Aid system.
在韩国,自2015年11月起,胰岛素治疗的2型糖尿病(T2DM)患者的血糖自我监测(SMBG)相关费用已得到报销。我们调查了这项新的SMBG报销计划是否改善了该政策受益人的血糖控制情况。
在所有报销时间≥3个月的成年T2DM患者(n = 854)中,选择研究期间降糖药物无任何变化的受试者。糖化血红蛋白(HbA1c)的改善定义为HbA1c绝对降低≥0.6%或随访时HbA1c水平<7%。
在所有研究受试者(n = 409)中,随访期间HbA1c水平从8.5%±1.3%显著降至8.2%±1.2%(P<0.001)。其中,35.5%(n = 145)的HbA1c有显著改善。医疗救助系统覆盖的受试者HbA1c改善的患病率高于有医疗保险的受试者(分别为52.2%和33.3%,P = 0.012)。在改善组中,基线HbA1c(P<0.001)、空腹C肽(P = 0.016)和胰岛素每日剂量/体重(P = 0.024)与HbA1c变化程度呈显著负相关。多因素分析显示,与有医疗保险的受试者相比,医疗救助系统的受试者HbA1c改善的可能性约高2.5倍(比值比,2.459;95%置信区间,1.138至5.314;P = 0.022)。
SMBG报销使使用胰岛素的T2DM受试者的HbA1c有显著改善,这在基线血糖控制不佳或医疗救助系统覆盖的受试者中更为突出。