Publication

The 30-year cost-effectiveness of alternative strategies to achieve excellent glycemic control in type 1 diabetes: An economic simulation informed by the results of the diabetes control and complications trial/epidemiology of diabetes interventions and complications (DCCT/EDIC)

Journal Paper/Review - Jun 12, 2018

Units
PubMed
Doi

Citation
Herman W, Braffett B, Kuo S, Lee J, Brändle M, Jacobson A, Prosser L, Lachin J. The 30-year cost-effectiveness of alternative strategies to achieve excellent glycemic control in type 1 diabetes: An economic simulation informed by the results of the diabetes control and complications trial/epidemiology of diabetes interventions and complications (DCCT/EDIC). J Diabetes Complicat 2018; 32:934-939.
Type
Journal Paper/Review (English)
Journal
J Diabetes Complicat 2018; 32
Publication Date
Jun 12, 2018
Issn Electronic
1873-460X
Pages
934-939
Brief description/objective

OBJECTIVE
To simulate the cost-effectiveness of historical and modern treatment scenarios that achieve excellent vs. poor glycemic control in type 1 diabetes (T1DM).

RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS
We describe and compare the costs of intensive and conventional therapies for T1DM as performed during DCCT, and modern intensive and basic therapy scenarios using insulin analogs, pens, pumps, and continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) to achieve excellent or poor glycemic control. We then assess the differences in treatment costs and the costs of outcomes over 30 years and report incremental cost-effectiveness ratios.

RESULTS
Over 30 years, DCCT intensive therapy cost $127,500 to $181,600 more per participant than DCCT conventional therapy, and modern intensive therapy cost $87,700 to $409,000 more per individual than modern basic therapy. Excellent glycemic control averted as much as $90,900 in costs from complications and added ~1.62 quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) per participant over 30 years. When costs and QALYs were discounted at 3% annually, DCCT intensive therapy and modern intensive therapies that use multiple daily injections (MDI) or pumps are cost-saving or cost-effective (<$100,000/QALY-gained). If applied to all patients with T1DM, modern intensive therapy using pumps and CGM is not cost-effective (>$250,000/QALY-gained) but would be more cost-effective if associated with less hypoglycemia, better glycemic control, fewer complications, or improved health-related quality-of-life.

CONCLUSIONS
Use of the least expensive intensive therapy needed to safely achieve treatment goals for patients with T1DM represents a good value for money.

TRIAL REGISTRATION
clinicaltrials.govNCT00360815 and NCT00360893.