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Incremental Costs and Cost Effectiveness of Intensive Treatment in Individuals with Type 2 Diabetes Detected by Screening in the ADDITION-UK Trial: An Update with Empirical Trial-Based Cost Data.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Laxy, Michael 
Wilson, Edward CF 
Boothby, Clare E 
Griffin, Simon J 

Abstract

BACKGROUND: There is uncertainty about the cost effectiveness of early intensive treatment versus routine care in individuals with type 2 diabetes detected by screening. OBJECTIVES: To derive a trial-informed estimate of the incremental costs of intensive treatment as delivered in the Anglo-Danish-Dutch Study of Intensive Treatment in People with Screen-Detected Diabetes in Primary Care-Europe (ADDITION) trial and to revisit the long-term cost-effectiveness analysis from the perspective of the UK National Health Service. METHODS: We analyzed the electronic primary care records of a subsample of the ADDITION-Cambridge trial cohort (n = 173). Unit costs of used primary care services were taken from the published literature. Incremental annual costs of intensive treatment versus routine care in years 1 to 5 after diagnosis were calculated using multilevel generalized linear models. We revisited the long-term cost-utility analyses for the ADDITION-UK trial cohort and reported results for ADDITION-Cambridge using the UK Prospective Diabetes Study Outcomes Model and the trial-informed cost estimates according to a previously developed evaluation framework. RESULTS: Incremental annual costs of intensive treatment over years 1 to 5 averaged £29.10 (standard error = £33.00) for consultations with general practitioners and nurses and £54.60 (standard error = £28.50) for metabolic and cardioprotective medication. For ADDITION-UK, over the 10-, 20-, and 30-year time horizon, adjusted incremental quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) were 0.014, 0.043, and 0.048, and adjusted incremental costs were £1,021, £1,217, and £1,311, resulting in incremental cost-effectiveness ratios of £71,232/QALY, £28,444/QALY, and £27,549/QALY, respectively. Respective incremental cost-effectiveness ratios for ADDITION-Cambridge were slightly higher. CONCLUSIONS: The incremental costs of intensive treatment as delivered in the ADDITION-Cambridge trial were lower than expected. Given UK willingness-to-pay thresholds in patients with screen-detected diabetes, intensive treatment is of borderline cost effectiveness over a time horizon of 20 years and more.

Description

Keywords

ADDITION trial, cost effectiveness, intensive treatment, screen-detected diabetes, Adult, Aged, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2, Female, Health Care Costs, Humans, Linear Models, Male, Mass Screening, Middle Aged, Primary Health Care, Prospective Studies, Quality-Adjusted Life Years, Time Factors, United Kingdom

Journal Title

Value Health

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1098-3015
1524-4733

Volume Title

20

Publisher

Elsevier BV
Sponsorship
NETSCC (None)
Medical Research Council (MC_UU_12015/4)
NIHR Central Commissioning Facility (NIHRDH-RP-PG-0606-1259)
Medical Research Council (G0001164)
Wellcome Trust (061895/Z/00/Z)
ADDITION-Cambridge was supported by the Wellcome Trust (grant reference No G061895) the Medical Research Council (grant reference no: G0001164), National Health Service R&D support funding (including the Primary Care Research and Diabetes Research Networks), and the National Institute for Health Research. We received an unrestricted grant from University of Aarhus, Denmark, to support the ADDITION-Cambridge trial. Bio-Rad provided equipment to undertake capillary glucose screening by HbA1c in general practice. SG is a National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Senior Investigator. The Primary Care Unit is supported by NIHR Research funds. SJG received support from the Department of Health NIHR Programme Grant funding scheme (RP-PG-0606-1259).