非相关未来医疗成本对不同糖尿病模型经济评估结果的影响

IF 3.1 4区 医学 Q1 ECONOMICS Applied Health Economics and Health Policy Pub Date : 2024-09-16 DOI:10.1007/s40258-024-00914-z
Ting Zhao, Michelle Tew, Talitha Feenstra, Pieter van Baal, Michael Willis, William J. Valentine, Philip M. Clarke, Barnaby Hunt, James Altunkaya, An Tran-Duy, Richard F. Pollock, Samuel J. P. Malkin, Andreas Nilsson, Phil McEwan, Volker Foos, Jose Leal, Elbert S. Huang, Neda Laiteerapong, Mark Lamotte, Harry Smolen, Jianchao Quan, Luís Martins, Mafalda Ramos, Andrew J. Palmer
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本研究利用 11 个独立的国际糖尿病模型中的数据,评估与未来医疗成本无关的因素对糖尿病健康经济评估结果的影响。方法 11 个模型模拟了 1 型糖尿病(T1D)或 2 型糖尿病(T2D)患者假定队列在剩余生命期内的糖尿病进展及其并发症的发生情况,以评估三种假定血糖改善干预措施与一种假定控制干预措施的成本效益。所有模型都从英国医疗保健系统的角度出发,使用了与糖尿病并发症和干预措施相关的同一组成本。使用了与糖尿病相关并发症有关的标准效用/效用值。假设所有干预组和对照组的未来非相关医疗成本相同。采用 t 检验法分析了加入非相关未来医疗成本前后的终生总成本、增量成本和增量成本效益比(ICER)变化的统计学意义,并按糖尿病类型汇总到增量成本效益图中。然而,在加入非相关未来医疗成本前后,平均增量成本和 ICER 没有明显差异。结论对于糖尿病而言,由于许多成本高昂的非传染性疾病已被明确建模为并发症,而且许多干预措施主要对改善生活质量有影响,因此无关的未来医疗成本对卫生经济评估结果的影响很小。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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The Impact of Unrelated Future Medical Costs on Economic Evaluation Outcomes for Different Models of Diabetes

Objective

This study leveraged data from 11 independent international diabetes models to evaluate the impact of unrelated future medical costs on the outcomes of health economic evaluations in diabetes mellitus.

Methods

Eleven models simulated the progression of diabetes and occurrence of its complications in hypothetical cohorts of individuals with type 1 (T1D) or type 2 (T2D) diabetes over the remaining lifetime of the patients to evaluate the cost effectiveness of three hypothetical glucose improvement interventions versus a hypothetical control intervention. All models used the same set of costs associated with diabetes complications and interventions, using a United Kingdom healthcare system perspective. Standard utility/disutility values associated with diabetes-related complications were used. Unrelated future medical costs were assumed equal for all interventions and control arms. The statistical significance of changes on the total lifetime costs, incremental costs and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) before and after adding the unrelated future medical costs were analysed using t-test and summarized in incremental cost-effectiveness diagrams by type of diabetes.

Results

The inclusion of unrelated costs increased mean total lifetime costs substantially. However, there were no significant differences between the mean incremental costs and ICERs before and after adding unrelated future medical costs. Unrelated future medical cost inclusion did not alter the original conclusions of the diabetes modelling evaluations.

Conclusions

For diabetes, with many costly noncommunicable diseases already explicitly modelled as complications, and with many interventions having predominantly an effect on the improvement of quality of life, unrelated future medical costs have a small impact on the outcomes of health economic evaluations.

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来源期刊
Applied Health Economics and Health Policy
Applied Health Economics and Health Policy Economics, Econometrics and Finance-Economics and Econometrics
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
2.80%
发文量
64
期刊介绍: Applied Health Economics and Health Policy provides timely publication of cutting-edge research and expert opinion from this increasingly important field, making it a vital resource for payers, providers and researchers alike. The journal includes high quality economic research and reviews of all aspects of healthcare from various perspectives and countries, designed to communicate the latest applied information in health economics and health policy. While emphasis is placed on information with practical applications, a strong basis of underlying scientific rigor is maintained.
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