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Original Article

Association between glycemic control and short-term healthcare costs among commercially insured diabetes patients in the United States

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Pages 108-114 | Accepted 10 Dec 2010, Published online: 11 Jan 2011
 

Abstract

Objectives:

Glycemic control, measured by HbA1c, is well known to be a risk marker for long-term costly diabetes-related complications. The relationship between HbA1c and short-term costs is unclear. This study investigates how HbA1c is correlated to short-term diabetes-related medical expenses.

Methods:

Patients with diabetes with an HbA1c reading ≥6% between April and September 2007 were identified from a large US managed-care organization. Healthcare utilization data was obtained during the subsequent 12-month period. Multivariate analyses were performed to estimate the correlation between HbA1c and diabetes-related healthcare costs.

Results:

In all, 34,469 and 1,837 patients with type 2 and type 1 diabetes, respectively, were identified with an HbA1c reading ≥6% (mean HbA1c: 7.4% and 7.9%). The majority of patients with type 1 diabetes were treated with insulin, while most patients with type 2 diabetes were treated with metformin. The multivariate analysis showed that several characteristics, including HbA1c, significantly correlate with diabetes-related medical costs for both patients with type 1 and type 2 diabetes. A 1-percentage-point increase in HbA1c will, on average, lead to a 6.0% and 4.4% increase in diabetes-related medical costs for type 1 and type 2 diabetes, respectively. This corresponds to an annual cost increase of $445 and $250 for patients with type 1 and type 2 diabetes, respectively.

Limitations:

Retrospective data analyses inherently associated with selection bias which can only partly be adjusted by statistical techniques. Furthermore, the study population is not necessarily representative of the general population and there can be isolated coding or data errors in the dataset.

Conclusions:

These results suggest that tighter glycemic control is associated with short-term cost benefits for patients with diabetes. This supplements conventional wisdom that HbA1c affects risk of long-term complications and long-term costs.

Transparency

Declaration of funding

The preparation of this article was supported by Novo Nordisk Inc., Princeton, NJ, USA.

Financial support

The preparation of this article was supported by Novo Nordisk Inc., Princeton, USA

Declaration of financial/other relationships

Both authors are employed by Novo Nordisk Inc.

Acknowledgment

The assistance of Dr Elien Moës, Watermeadow Medical plc, UK, in preparing this article is gratefully acknowledged.

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