| Literature DB >> 20712936 |
Kenneth J Smith1, Heather E Hsu, Mark S Roberts, M Kaye Kramer, Trevor J Orchard, Gretchen A Piatt, Miriam C Seidel, Janice C Zgibor, Cindy L Bryce.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: We assessed the cost-effectiveness of a community-based, modified Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP) designed to reduce risk factors for type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20712936 PMCID: PMC2938403
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prev Chronic Dis ISSN: 1545-1151 Impact factor: 2.830
Base Case Values for Decision Model and Ranges Examined in Sensitivity Analyses of Efforts to Reduce Risk of Type 2 Diabetes and Cardiovascular Disease, Southwestern Pennsylvania, 2005-2007
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| Base Case Value | Type of Distribution | Range Examined | Reference |
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| Starting age, y | 55 | Uniform | 45–65 | Assumption |
| Women, % | 75 | Beta | 48.2-94.0 | mDPP data ( |
| African American, % | 27.1 | Beta | 6.5-55.8 | mDPP data ( |
| Angina, % | 3.8 | Beta | 1.0-8.3 | mDPP data ( |
| Hypertension, treated, % | 84.9 | Beta | 4.5-100 | mDPP data ( |
| History of cardiac arrest or MI, % | 1.9 | Beta | 0.5-4.2 | mDPP data ( |
| History of stroke, % | 1.9 | Beta | 0.5-4.2 | mDPP data ( |
| Peripheral vascular disease, % | 4.7 | Beta | 1.3-10.2 | mDPP data ( |
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| Probability of screening risk-factor–positive | 31.0 | Beta | 7.2-63.5 | mDPP data ( |
| Probability of enrollment | 47.0 | Beta | 9.2-86.7 | mDPP data ( |
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| Not in prevention program, risk-factor–positive | 10.8 | Beta | 2.9-23.3 | Herman et al ( |
| Not in prevention program, risk-factor–negative | 0.4 | Beta | 0.05-0.75 | Fox et al ( |
| In prevention program | 4.8 | Beta | 1.3-10.5 | Herman et al ( |
| Yearly probability of becoming risk-factor–positive | 4.0 | Beta | 1.0-8.7 | Orchard et al ( |
| Yearly probability of progressing to complicated diabetes | 7.5 | Beta | 2.0-16.3 | Herman et al ( |
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| Not in prevention program | 12.1 | Beta | 3.2-25.9 | Orchard et al ( |
| In prevention program | 16.2 | Beta | 4.2-34.4 | mDPP data ( |
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| Risk-factor–positive | 1.7 | Log-normal | 1.5-1.8 | Lakka et al ( |
| Risk-factor–negative | 1.0 | NA | Not varied | Assumption |
| Stable diabetes | 2.0 | Log-normal | 1.8-2.2 | Moss et al ( |
| Complicated diabetes | 2.4 | Log-normal | 2.2-2.6 | Fuller et al ( |
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| No diabetes, risk-factor–positive, not in prevention program | 0.73 | Uniform | 0.71-0.75 | Herman et al ( |
| No diabetes, risk-factor–positive, in prevention program | 0.75 | Uniform | 0.73-0.77 | Herman et al ( |
| No diabetes, risk-factor–negative | 0.88 | Uniform | 0.84-0.92 | Gold et al ( |
| Stable diabetes | 0.69 | Uniform | 0.66-0.72 | Herman et al ( |
| Complicated diabetes | 0.59 | Uniform | 0.51-0.68 | Herman et al ( |
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| Screening, risk-factor–positive, $ | 35 | Uniform | 18-53 | mDPP data ( |
| Screening, risk-factor–negative, $ | 32 | Uniform | 16-48 | mDPP data ( |
| Prevention program, $ | 219 | Uniform | 110-329 | mDPP data ( |
| Risk-factor–positive (yearly), $ | 1,296 | NA | Not varied | Herman et al ( |
| Multiplier for female | 1.14 | Normal | 1.05-1.25 | Herman et al ( |
| Multiplier for African American | 0.82 | Normal | 0.70-0.95 | Herman et al ( |
| Risk-factor–negative (yearly), $ | 616 | NA | Not varied | MEPS |
| Base diabetes cost (yearly), $ | 1,684 | NA | Not varied | Herman et al ( |
| Multiplier for female | 1.25 | Normal | 1.14-1.35 | Herman et al ( |
| Multiplier for African American | 0.82 | Normal | 0.70-0.95 | Herman et al ( |
| Base complicated diabetes cost (yearly), $ | 1,684 | NA | Not varied | Herman et al ( |
| Multiplier for female | 1.25 | Normal | 1.14-1.35 | Herman et al ( |
| Multiplier for African American | 0.82 | Normal | 0.70-0.95 | Herman et al ( |
| Multiplier for angina | 1.73 | Normal | 1.31-2.14 | Herman et al ( |
| Multiplier for hypertension, treated | 1.24 | Normal | 1.10-1.37 | Herman et al ( |
| Multiplier for history of cardiac arrest or MI | 1.90 | Normal | 1.64-2.17 | Herman et al ( |
| Multiplier for history of stroke | 1.30 | Normal | 1.20-1.40 | Herman et al ( |
| Multiplier for peripheral vascular disease | 1.31 | Normal | 1.10-1.53 | Herman et al ( |
Abbreviations: mDPP, modified Diabetes Prevention Program; MI, myocardial infarction; NA, not applicable; MEPS, Medical Expenditure Panel Survey.
The yearly cost for risk-factor–negative ($616) was computed using the subset of MEPS respondents who had incurred health care expenses during the year and who reported a perceived health status of good, very good, or excellent (29).
Figure 1Model analyzing cost-effectiveness of a modified Diabetes Prevention Program (mDPP), southwestern Pennsylvania, 2005-2007. Ovals indicate health states. Subjects may remain in a health state (short curved arrow) or may move to a different health state (straight arrow or long curved arrow) during each model cycle.
Figure 2One-way sensitivity analyses assessing cost-effectiveness of a modified Diabetes Prevention Program (mDPP), southwestern Pennsylvania, 2005-2007. Horizontal bars depict the range of cost-effectiveness ratios for the values shown for each parameter. The vertical dotted line depicts the base case cost-effectiveness ratio. Variation of all other parameters not shown in the figure did not increase the cost-effectiveness ratio above $7,000 per quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) gained.
Figure 3Probabilistic (Monte Carlo) sensitivity analyses assessing cost-effectiveness of a modified Diabetes Prevention Program (mDPP), southwestern Pennsylvania, 2005-2007. The acceptability curve depicts the likelihood of an mDPP lifestyle intervention being favored for a given cost-effectiveness ceiling threshold (willingness to pay).
| Figure 2 shows the 1-way sensitivity analysis for 8 model parameters. For each parameter, we summarize the parameter values (baseline value; range: minimum, maximum) and provide the corresponding cost-effectiveness ratios (CERs). |
| For example, the first parameter listed is “Probability of reducing risk factors without an mDPP.” The baseline probability was 12.1%, but in sensitivity analyses, we varied this value from a low of 3.2% to a high of 25.9%. At the baseline value, the cost-effectiveness ratio was $3,420. If this probability decreases to 3.2%, then the cost-effectiveness ratio is $783 per QALY; if the probability increases to 25.9%, then the cost-effectiveness ratio is $18,580. We summarize this information as follows: |
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Probability of reducing risk factors without an mDPP: 12.1%; range, 3.2%-25.9% ($3,420; range, $783-$18,580) |
| Analogous summaries for the remaining 7 parameters are |
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Probability of enrollment in an mDPP: 47.0%; range, 9.2%-86.7% ($3,420; range, $16,707-$1,911) Probability of reducing risk factors with an mDPP: 16.2%; range, 4.2%-34.4% ($3,420; range, $13,087-$0) Probability of screening risk-factor–positive: 31.0%; range, 7.2%-63.5% ($3,420; range, $14,046-$1,818) Utility for risk-factor–positive patients with an mDPP: 0.75; range, 0.73-0.77 ($3,420; range, $13,178-$1,926) Probability of diabetes for risk-factor–positive patients without an mDPP: 10.8%; range, 2.9%-23.3% ($3,420; range, 8,505-$0) Probability of diabetes for risk-factor–positive patients with an mDPP: 4.8%; range, 1.3%-10.5% ($3,420; range, $7,085-$1,911) Utility for risk-factor–positive patients without an mDPP: 0.73; range, 0.71-0.75 ($3,420; range, $2,280-$7,301) |
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| Probability of reducing risk factors without an mDPP | 12.1% | 3.2% | 25.9% | 3,420 | 783 | 18,580 |
| Probability of enrollment in an mDPP | 47.0% | 9.2% | 86.7% | 3,420 | 1,911 | 16,707 |
| Probability of reducing risk factors with an mDPP | 16.2% | 4.2% | 34.4% | 3,420 | 0 | 13,087 |
| Probability of screening risk-factor–positive | 31.0% | 7.2% | 63.5% | 3,420 | 1,818 | 14,046 |
| Utility for risk-factor–positive patients with an mDPP | 0.75 | 0.73 | 0.77 | 3,420 | 1,926 | 13,178 |
| Probability of diabetes for risk-factor–positive patients without an mDPP | 10.8% | 2.9% | 23.3% | 3,420 | 0 | 8,505 |
| Probability of diabetes for risk-factor–positive patients with an mDPP | 4.8% | 1.3% | 10.5% | 3,420 | 1,911 | 7,085 |
| Utility for risk-factor–positive patients without an mDPP | 0.73 | 0.71 | 0.75 | 3,420 | 2,280 | 7,301 |
Abbreviations: QALY, quality-adjusted life-year; Min, minimum; Max, maximum; CER, cost-effectiveness ratios; mDPP, modified Diabetes Prevention Program.
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|---|---|
| 0 | 12 |
| 5,000 | 50 |
| 10,000 | 67 |
| 15,000 | 75 |
| 20,000 | 79 |
| 25,000 | 82 |
| 30,000 | 84 |
| 35,000 | 85 |
| 40,000 | 86 |
| 45,000 | 87 |
| 50,000 | 87 |
| 55,000 | 87 |
| 60,000 | 88 |
| 65,000 | 88 |
| 70,000 | 88 |
| 75,000 | 88 |
| 80,000 | 89 |
| 85,000 | 89 |
| 90,000 | 89 |
| 95,000 | 89 |
| 100,000 | 89 |