Division of Epidemiology & Biostatistics, School of Public Health, University of Cape Town, Anzio Road, Cape Town 7925, South Africa.
National Heart and Lung Institute, Imperial College London, 1B Manresa Road, London SW3 6LR, United Kingdom.
Health Policy Plan. 2024 Oct 15;39(9):946-955. doi: 10.1093/heapol/czae072.
Type 2 diabetes (T2D) represents a growing disease burden in South Africa. While glycated haemoglobin (HbA1c) testing is the gold standard for long-term blood glucose management, recommendations for HbA1c monitoring frequency are based on expert opinion. This study investigates the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of alternative HbA1c monitoring intervals in the management of T2D. A Markov model with three health states (HbA1c <7%, HbA1c ≥ 7%, Dead) was used to estimate lifetime costs and quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) of alternative HbA1c monitoring intervals among patients with T2D, using a provider's perspective and a 3% discount rate. HbA1c monitoring strategies (three-monthly, four-monthly, six-monthly and annual tests) were evaluated with respect to the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) assessing each comparator against a less costly, undominated alternative. The scope of costs included the direct medical costs of managing diabetes. Transition probabilities were obtained from routinely collected public sector HbA1c data, while health service utilization and health-related-quality-of-life (HRQoL) data were obtained from a local cluster randomized controlled trial. Other parameters were obtained from published studies. Robustness of findings was evaluated using one-way and probabilistic sensitivity analyses. A South African indicative cost-effectiveness threshold of USD2665 was adopted. Annual and lifetime costs of managing diabetes increased with HbA1c monitoring, while increased monitoring provides higher QALYs and life years. For the overall cohort, the ICER for six-monthly vs annual monitoring was cost-effective (USD23 22.37 per QALY gained), whereas the ICER of moving from six-monthly to three-monthly monitoring was not cost effective (USD6437.79 per QALY gained). The ICER for four-monthly vs six-monthly monitoring was extended dominated. The sensitivity analysis showed that the ICERs were most sensitive to health service utilization rates. While the factors influencing glycaemic control are multifactorial, six-monthly monitoring is potentially cost-effective while more frequent monitoring could further improve patient HrQoL.
2 型糖尿病(T2D)在南非造成的疾病负担日益加重。糖化血红蛋白(HbA1c)检测是长期血糖管理的金标准,但 HbA1c 监测频率的建议是基于专家意见。本研究调查了替代 HbA1c 监测间隔在 T2D 管理中的有效性和成本效益。使用 Markov 模型,有三个健康状态(HbA1c<7%、HbA1c≥7%、死亡),从提供者的角度并采用 3%的贴现率,估计 T2D 患者替代 HbA1c 监测间隔的终生成本和质量调整生命年(QALY)。HbA1c 监测策略(每三个月、每四个月、每六个月和每年一次的检测)与增量成本效益比(ICER)进行了评估,该比率评估了每种比较药物与成本较低、不占优势的替代药物相比的成本效益。成本范围包括管理糖尿病的直接医疗成本。转移概率来自常规收集的公共部门 HbA1c 数据,而卫生服务利用和与健康相关的生活质量(HRQoL)数据则来自当地的一项集群随机对照试验。其他参数则来自已发表的研究。通过单因素敏感性分析和概率敏感性分析评估了研究结果的稳健性。采用南非指示性成本效益阈值 2665 美元。管理糖尿病的年度和终生成本随着 HbA1c 监测的增加而增加,而增加监测可提供更高的 QALY 和生命年。对于整个队列,与年度监测相比,每六个月监测的 ICER 是具有成本效益的(每获得一个 QALY 增加 2322.37 美元),而从每六个月监测改为每三个月监测则不具有成本效益(每获得一个 QALY 增加 6437.79 美元)。每四个月监测与每六个月监测相比则具有扩展优势。敏感性分析表明,ICER 对卫生服务利用率最为敏感。尽管影响血糖控制的因素是多方面的,但每六个月监测具有潜在的成本效益,而更频繁的监测可以进一步提高患者的 HRQoL。