Willey Vincent J, Kong Sheldon, Wu Bingcao, Raval Amit, Hobbs Todd, Windsheimer Andrea, Deshpande Gaurav, Tunceli Ozgur, Sakurada Brian, Bouchard Jonathan R
Staff Vice President, HealthCore, Wilmington, DE.
Executive Director, Health Economics and Outcomes Research, Novo Nordisk, Plainsboro, NJ.
Am Health Drug Benefits. 2018 Sep;11(6):310-318.
Diabetes is associated with substantial clinical and economic burdens on patients and on the US healthcare system. Treatment options for patients with type 1 or type 2 diabetes have increased significantly, from only 3 drug classes in 1995 to more than 12 distinct classes today. Although several of the newer treatments are reported to have improved efficacy and safety profiles, they are often substantially more costly than older medications. Consequently, as drug options increase, the cost of diabetes management continues to grow.
To estimate the annual real-world costs of type 1 and 2 diabetes, as well as diabetes prevalence, treatment patterns, care quality, and resource utilization during 8 years.
In this cross-sectional study, we examined 8 annual cohorts of patients with type 1 or type 2 diabetes, on a biennial basis, using claims data from the HealthCore Integrated Research Database between 2006 and 2014. Patients were matched with controls by age, sex, residency, and health plan type. We assessed the prevalence of diabetes, treatment patterns, care quality measures, and all-cause and diabetes-related healthcare costs using 2 methods. Method 1 calculated the annual costs as the difference in all-cause costs between patients with diabetes and matched controls. Method 2 calculated the costs for healthcare encounters based on specific codes for a diabetes diagnosis or for antidiabetes medications.
Between 346,486 and 410,234 patients with type 2 diabetes and between 21,176 and 26,228 patients with type 1 diabetes were included in each study year cohort. Between 2007 and 2014, the prevalence of type 2 diabetes increased from 4.9% to 6.3%. The costs associated with using Method 1 were almost double the cost estimates in Method 2 during most of the study period. For patients with type 1 diabetes, the associated costs were twice greater with Method 1 than with Method 2. Projections to the entire US population in 2014 indicated a total of 19.3 million individuals with diabetes and associated direct costs of $314.8 billion that year.
Cost estimates can guide the prioritization of healthcare expenditures. The results of this study showed that costs attributable to diabetes differed by approximately 2-fold, depending on the estimation method. The management of the escalating expenses for diabetes management in the United States requires judicious selection of the methods for estimating costs.
糖尿病给患者及美国医疗保健系统带来了巨大的临床和经济负担。1型或2型糖尿病患者的治疗选择显著增加,从1995年的仅3类药物增至如今的12类以上。尽管据报道几种较新的治疗方法具有更高的疗效和安全性,但它们通常比旧药物昂贵得多。因此,随着药物选择的增加,糖尿病管理的成本持续增长。
估计1型和2型糖尿病的年度实际成本,以及8年间糖尿病的患病率、治疗模式、护理质量和资源利用情况。
在这项横断面研究中,我们使用2006年至2014年HealthCore综合研究数据库中的理赔数据,每两年对1型或2型糖尿病患者的8个年度队列进行一次检查。患者按年龄、性别、居住地和健康计划类型与对照组进行匹配。我们使用两种方法评估糖尿病的患病率、治疗模式、护理质量指标以及全因和糖尿病相关的医疗保健成本。方法1将年度成本计算为糖尿病患者与匹配对照组之间全因成本的差异。方法2根据糖尿病诊断或抗糖尿病药物的特定代码计算医疗就诊成本。
每个研究年度队列纳入了346,486至410,234例2型糖尿病患者和21,176至26,228例1型糖尿病患者。2007年至2014年期间,2型糖尿病的患病率从4.9%增至6.3%。在研究的大部分时间里,使用方法1的成本几乎是方法2成本估计值的两倍。对于1型糖尿病患者,方法1的相关成本是方法2的两倍。对2014年美国总人口的预测表明,当年共有1930万糖尿病患者,相关直接成本为3148亿美元。
成本估计可指导医疗保健支出的优先排序。本研究结果表明,根据估计方法的不同,糖尿病相关成本相差约两倍。在美国,应对不断攀升的糖尿病管理费用需要明智地选择成本估计方法。