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Health care costs associated with escalation of drug treatment in type 2 diabetes mellitus
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2001
Year
Total CostFamily MedicineDrug TreatmentPublic HealthHealth Services ResearchDiabetes ManagementHealth PolicyInsulin ManagementType 2Outcomes ResearchPharmacoeconomicsDiabetes ComplicationsHealth Care CostsHealth Care DeliveryHealth EconomicsDiabetesHealth Care CostDiabetes MellitusMedicine
The cost of different intensities of therapy in HMO patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus was studied. Health care utilization data from 1995 were obtained for 12,200 registrants from the Kaiser Permanente Northwest Diabetes Registry who had type 2 diabetes mellitus. The data were used to determine costs associated with the escalation of antidiabetic therapies in persons with type 2 diabetes mellitus. The total annual costs (in 1993 dollars) associated with no drug therapy, a sulfonylurea only, metformin, a sulfonylurea plus insulin, and insulin alone were $4400, $4187, $4838, $8856, and $7365, respectively. Per patient total costs were higher for patients who had received antidiabetic therapy in 1995 or previously than for those who had not ($5303 versus $4365) and for patients who had received insulin therapy than for those who had not ($7379 versus $4117). Macrovascular complications accounted for 62-89% of the cost associated with inpatient treatment of diabetes-related complications. The total cost of treating patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus at an HMO increased as antidiabetic therapies escalated.