Lage Maureen J, Boye Kristina S, Bae Jay Patrick, Wu Jianmin, Mody Reema, Botros Fady T
a HealthMetrics Outcomes Research , Bonita Springs , FL , USA.
b Eli Lilly and Company , Indianapolis , IN , USA.
J Med Econ. 2019 May;22(5):447-454. doi: 10.1080/13696998.2019.1581208. Epub 2019 Mar 4.
Examine healthcare costs across chronic kidney disease (CKD) stages for US patients with type 2 diabetes (T2D).
IQVIA Real World Data Adjudicated Claims linked electronic medical records and insurance claims from January 1, 2012 through March 31, 2017 were used for this retrospective study. Adults diagnosed with T2D and comorbid CKD were included. General linear models incorporating splines were constructed, and information from these regressions were used to inform the relationship between medical costs and CKD. Multivariable analyses controlled for patient characteristics, vital signs, general health, prior medication use, prior visit to specialists, index A1c, and year of index date.
There were 6,645 individuals who met the study criteria. Results generally indicate sharp increases in annual total medical costs and non-drug medical costs in the 1 year post-period for patients with Stage 4 or 5 CKD (estimated glomerular filtration rate [eGFR] ≤ 30 mL/min/1.73 m) with each 1 point reduction in eGFR from 30 associated with an increase of $1,870 in all-cause total medical costs (p < 0.0001) and $1,805 of all-cause non-drug medical costs (p < 0.0001). Similarly, each point decline below 30 mL/min was associated annual cost increases of $1,701 for CKD-related total medical costs, $1,695 for CKD-related non-drug medical costs, $173 for diabetes-related medical costs, and $187 for diabetes-related non-drug medical costs (all p < 0.0001).
The investigation included only patients with medical insurance and laboratory test results, and results may not be generalizable to all T2D patients with CKD. The methodology allowed us to determine associations, not causation, and potential confounders, such as duration of diabetes, diet, exercise, or social support, could not be assessed.
Results indicate there are sharp and significant increases in medical costs among T2D patients with Stage 4 and 5 CKD compared to those with earlier stages of CKD.
研究美国2型糖尿病(T2D)患者慢性肾脏病(CKD)各阶段的医疗费用。
本回顾性研究使用了IQVIA真实世界数据裁决索赔,该数据链接了2012年1月1日至2017年3月31日的电子病历和保险索赔。纳入诊断为T2D合并CKD的成年人。构建了包含样条的一般线性模型,并利用这些回归分析的信息来了解医疗费用与CKD之间的关系。多变量分析控制了患者特征、生命体征、总体健康状况、既往用药情况、既往专科就诊情况、首次糖化血红蛋白(A1c)以及首次就诊日期年份。
有6645人符合研究标准。结果总体表明,对于4期或5期CKD(估算肾小球滤过率[eGFR]≤30 mL/min/1.73 m²)患者,在进入该阶段后的1年中,年度总医疗费用和非药物医疗费用急剧增加,eGFR每从30降低1个单位,全因总医疗费用增加1870美元(p<0.0001),全因非药物医疗费用增加1805美元(p<0.0001)。同样,eGFR低于30 mL/min每降低1个单位,CKD相关总医疗费用每年增加1701美元,CKD相关非药物医疗费用每年增加1695美元,糖尿病相关医疗费用每年增加173美元,糖尿病相关非药物医疗费用每年增加187美元(所有p<0.0001)。
该调查仅包括有医疗保险和实验室检查结果的患者,结果可能无法推广到所有T2D合并CKD患者。该方法使我们能够确定关联,而非因果关系,并且无法评估潜在的混杂因素,如糖尿病病程、饮食、运动或社会支持等。
结果表明,与CKD早期阶段的T2D患者相比,4期和5期CKD的T2D患者医疗费用急剧且显著增加。