4.3 Article

Direct Medical Costs for Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus Complications in the US Commercial Payer Setting A Resource for Economic Research

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APPLIED HEALTH ECONOMICS AND HEALTH POLICY
卷 6, 期 2-3, 页码 103-112

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SPRINGER INT PUBL AG
DOI: 10.1007/BF03256126

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  1. Eli Lilly and Company, Indianapolis, IN, USA

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Background: Medical complications are the key drivers of the direct medical costs of treating patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus. However, the published literature shows great variability across studies in the number and type of sources from which these costs for diabetes are obtained. Objective: To provide to researchers a set of costs for type 2 diabetes complications, originally developed for input into an established diabetes model, that are empirically based, clearly and consistently defined and applicable to a large segment of managed care patients in the US. Methods: Patients with 1 of 24 diabetes-related complications between 1 January 2003 and 31 December 2004 and with evidence of type 2 diabetes were identified using a nationally representative US commercial insurance claims database. Therapy utilization and complication cost data were extracted for all patients for the 12 months following the first identified complication; data for months 13-24 were obtained for a subset of patients with at least 24 months of follow-up enrolment. Medical costs included both the amounts charged by medical providers and the health plan contracted allowed amounts. Costs were expressed as $US, year 2007 values. Results: A total of 44 021 patients with a minimum of 12 months of continuous follow-up enrolment were identified, with a mean age of 56 years; a subset of 32 991 patients with at least 24 months of continuous health-plan enrolment was also identified. Among the aggregate sample, 74% of patients were receiving oral antidiabetics, 26% were receiving insulin, 43% were receiving ACE inhibitors and 50% were receiving antihyperlipidaemics/HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors (statins) during the first 12 months following the index complication. The majority of patients had at least one physician office visit (99.8%), laboratory diagnostic test (96.2%) and other outpatient visit (97.5%). Six complications (angina pectoris, heart failure, peripheral vascular disease, renal disease, nonproliferative retinopathy and neuropathy) had a prevalence of at least 10%. Allowed amounts for most complications were 30-45% of charges. Myocardial infarction, heart failure and renal disease had the greatest fiscal impact because of the total number of patients experiencing them (7.2%, 14.0% and 11.0%, respectively) and their associated costs; 12-month mean allowed amounts were $US14 853, $US11 257 and $US13 876, respectively, and 12-month mean charged amounts were $US41 695, $US30 066 and $US34 987, respectively. Similarly, in the subset of 32 991 patients, these three complications had higher allowed and charged amounts over months 13-24 compared with the majority of other complications of interest. Conclusion: These costing results provide an important resource for economic modelling and other types of costing research related to treating diabetes-related complications within the US managed care system.

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