| Literature DB >> 26786291 |
Pamela C Heaton1, Vibha C A Desai2, Christina M L Kelton3,4, Swapnil N Rajpathak5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hospital inpatient care for patients with diabetes was estimated to cost $76 billion in 2012. Substantial expense resulted from those patients having multiple hospitalizations. The objective was to compare the risk for diabetes-related hospital readmission in patients with type 2 diabetes treated with sulfonylureas (SUs) compared to those treated with other oral antihyperglycemic agents (AHAs).Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26786291 PMCID: PMC4719386 DOI: 10.1186/s12902-016-0084-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Endocr Disord ISSN: 1472-6823 Impact factor: 2.763
Hospital Readmission Rates and Average Readmission Costs for Medication-Based Patient Cohorts: 1999–2010. The readmission percentage is found by dividing the number readmitted to the hospital by the total number of patients who experienced an initial diabetes-related hospitalization. Readmission cost is expressed in 2010 U.S. dollars
| Patient Cohort | Total number (SE) | Number not readmitted (SE) | Number readmitted (SE) | Readmission percentage | Mean readmission cost (SE) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| All Patients | 13,537,803 (519,634) | 10,959,266 (451,218) | 2,578,538 (198,384) | 19.1 | $8,814 ($580) |
| All SU Patients a | 7,871,912 (368,351) | 6,204,869 (326,273) | 1,667,043 (153,735) | 21.2 | $9,204 ($769) |
| SU (SU monotherapy) b | 3,217,089 (235,951) | 2,470,510 (194,884) | 746,579 (106,554) | 23.2 | $11,148 ($1,558) |
| SU+ (other AHA) | 4,654,823 (274,495) | 3,734,359 (247,494) | 920,464 (113,487) | 19.8 | $7,624 ($412) |
| All Other Oral AHA Patients a | 5,665,891 (291,467) | 4,754,397 (256,821) | 911,495 (108,690) | 16.1 | $8,098 ($737) |
| noSU (monotherapy with non-SU AHA) b | 5,488,379 (288,154) | 4,606,396 (254,357) | 881,984 (107,289) | 16.1 | $7,673 ($763) |
| noSU+ (> 1 non-SU AHA) | 177,512 (na) | 148,001 (na) | 29,511 (na) | 16.6 | $20,772 (na) |
SE standard error
na not available due to too low raw cell count
SU sulfonylurea
AHA antihyperglycemic agent
a In a comparison between all SU (SU and SU+) patients and all other oral AHA patients, the relevant p-value for readmission rates was 0.017
b In a comparison between SU patients and noSU monotherapy patients, the relevant p-value for readmission rates was 0.003
Baseline characteristics for patients receiving antidiabetic monotherapy. Characteristics include demographic characteristics; insurance coverage; period of first hospital admission; comorbidities; medical care received; and disease severity. In order to achieve balance between the cohorts in characteristic distributions, propensity scores were estimated and used as a covariate in the Cox proportional hazard regression following a statistical check to see whether balance was achieved
| Characteristic | All Patients (Percent) | SU Cohort (Percent) | noSU Cohort (Percent) | p-value a | Adjusted p-value b |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total | 8,705,468 | 3,217,089 | 5,488,379 | ||
| Mean Age (95 % CI) | 63.4 (62.5–64.4) | 68.3 (67.0–69.7) | 60.5 (59.3–61.7) | <0.0001 | 0.951 |
| Male | 3,738,700 (42.9) | 1,514,251 (47.1) | 2,224,449 (40.5) | 0.093 | 0.985 |
| Race | |||||
| White | 6,859,909 (78.8) | 2,525,415 (78.5) | 4,346,796 (79.2) | ||
| African American | 1,305,820 (15.0) | 466,478 (14.5) | 856,187 (15.6) | 0.784 | 0.912 |
| Other | 539,739 (6.2) | 225,196 (7.0) | 285,396 (5.2) | ||
| Region | |||||
| Northeast | 1,647,688 (18.9) | 465,284 (14.5) | 1,182,404 (21.5) | ||
| Midwest | 2,007,585 (23.1) | 777,258 (24.2) | 1,230,327 (22.4) | 0.115 | 0.994 |
| South | 3,290,396 (37.8) | 1,278,818 (39.8) | 2,011,578 (36.7) | ||
| West | 1,534,591 (17.6) | 526,591 (16.4) | 1,008,000 (18.4) | ||
| Married | 4,530,506 (52.0) | 1,578,073 (49.1) | 2,952,432 (53.8) | 0.193 | 0.992 |
| Insurance status | |||||
| Public | 3,410,507 (39.2) | 1,455,344 (45.2) | 1,955,164 (35.6) | ||
| Private | 4,442,060 (51.0) | 1,457,269 (45.3) | 2,984,792 (54.4) | 0.0881 | 0.998 |
| Other | 223,194 (2.6) | 136,278 (4.2) | 86,916 (1.6) | ||
| Uninsured | 629,707 (7.2) | 168,199 (5.2) | 461,508 (8.4) | ||
| Period of first hospital admission | |||||
| 1999–2003 | 1,796,930 (20.6) | 1,012,088 (31.5) | 784,842 (14.3) | ||
| 2004–2007 | 3,932,720 (45.2) | 1,475,349 (45.9) | 2,457,371 (44.8) | <0.0001 | 0.937 |
| 2008–2010 | 2,975,819 (34.2) | 729,652 (22.7) | 2,246,166 (40.9) | ||
| Cardiovascular disease | 5,272,543 (60.6) | 1,695,922 (52.7) | 3,576,621 (65.2) | 0.0017 | 0.966 |
| Renal disease | 823,544 (9.5) | 354,703 (11.0) | 468,840 (8.52) | 0.298 | 0.979 |
| Eye disease | 1,454,104 (16.7) | 547,914 (17.7) | 886,190 (16.2) | 0.624 | 0.995 |
| Mean number of HbA1c tests (95 % CI) | 3.5 (2.4–4.7) | 3.1 (1.4–4.92) | 3.8 (2.3–5.2) | 0.602 | 0.443 |
| Perceived health status | |||||
| Excellent/Very good | 1,782,916 (20.5) | 616,432 (19.2) | 1,166,485 (21.3) | ||
| Good | 2,674,290 (30.7) | 792,801 (24.6) | 1,881,489 (34.3) | 0.012 | 0.973 |
| Fair/Poor | 4,161,730 (47.8) | 1,767,732 (55.0) | 2,393,999 (43.6) | ||
| Perceived mental health status | |||||
| Excellent/Very good | 3,830,005 (44.0) | 1,219,758 (37.9) | 2,610,246(48.2) | ||
| Good | 2,678,886 (30.8) | 998,646 (31.0) | 1,680,241 (30.6) | 0.017 | 0.919 |
| Fair/Poor | 2,110,045 (24.2) | 958,560 (29.8) | 1,150,485 (21.0) | ||
| Physical limitations | 4,119,188 (47.3) | 1,634,470 (50.8) | 2,484,718 (45.3) | 0.153 | 0.991 |
| Difficulty in getting care | 4,541,484 (52.2) | 1,554,111 (48.3) | 2,987,374 (54.4) | 0.107 | 0.989 |
CI confidence interval
a p-value for the test of equality (t- or chi-squared) of percentage distributions between cohorts
b p-value for the test of treatment effect on patient characteristic, controlling for patient propensity score
Fig. 1Kaplan-Meier curves for time to readmission within one year for patients receiving sulfonylurea monotherapy versus monotherapy with another oral antihyperglycemic agent. Each data point along the two curves represents the proportion of patients not readmitted to the hospital after a specified length of time following their first diabetes-related hospitalization. At the end of one year, approximately 72 % of patients taking a sulfonylurea remained out of the hospital, whereas over 80 % of patients not taking a sulfonylurea had not been rehospitalized
Estimated hazard ratios from a Cox proportional hazard regression with time to hospital readmission as the dependent variable. After propensity-score adjustment, and controlling for demographic and other patient characteristics, patients on a sulfonylurea were 29 % more likely to be readmitted to the hospital than patients on another oral antihyperglycemic agent. Unmarried patients and patients with eye disease were also more likely to be readmitted
| Independent variable a | Hazard ratio | 95 % confidence interval | p-value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sulfonylurea | 1.29 | 1.01–1.65 | 0.042 |
| Age | 1.01 | 0.98–1.03 | 0.749 |
| Male | 0.96 | 0.61–1.28 | 0.838 |
| Race | |||
| African American | 0.89 | 0.66–1.28 | 0.512 |
| Other | 0.96 | 0.61–1.52 | 0.867 |
| White | 1.00 | ||
| Region | |||
| Northeast | 1.00 | 0.65–1.44 | 0.864 |
| Midwest | 0.86 | 0.62–1.18 | 0.349 |
| West | 1.28 | 0.94–1.74 | 0.110 |
| South | 1.00 | ||
| Unmarried | 1.44 | 1.04–1.99 | 0.030 |
| Period of first hospital admission | |||
| 1999–2003 | 0.69 | 0.37–1.28 | 0.235 |
| 2008–2010 | 0.49 | 0.31–0.78 | 0.003 |
| 2004–2007 | 1.00 | ||
| Cardiovascular disease | 1.30 | 0.89–1.89 | 0.147 |
| Renal disease | 1.34 | 0.90–1.98 | 0.589 |
| Eye disease | 1.45 | 1.06–2.00 | 0.022 |
| Perceived health status | |||
| Good | 0.76 | 0.49–1.18 | 0.221 |
| Fair or poor | 1.09 | 0.70–1.67 | 0.709 |
| Excellent or very good | 1.00 | ||
| Physical limitations | 1.09 | 0.79–1.51 | 0.589 |
a The patient propensity score was also included in the regression. Its estimated coefficient was not statistically significant (p > 0.100)
ICD-9 Codes for diabetes-related conditions
| Condition | ICD-9 code(s) |
|---|---|
| Diabetes | 250 |
| Cardiovascular disease | 410–414, V458, 398, 428,426,427,785, V450, V533, 430–438, 437, 415–417, 440–414 |
| Renal disease | 585–586, V420, V451, V56, 580–584, 590, 595,597, 598, 599 |
| Lower extremity disease | 337,342–344, 354,355,356,357,358, 440, 442, 443, 444, 445, 711, 718, 727, 739, 735, 736, 784, 020, 021, 022, 031, 032, 035, 039, 680–682, 684–686, 690, 694–698, 700–703, 707, 709, V133, V423 |
| Eye disease | 361,362, 365–369,V431, V410 |
| Mycoses | 110–112, 114, 115, 116–118 |
| Fluid and electrolyte disorders | 276 |
| Fractures | 800–829 |
| Syncope | 780 |
| Other injuries | 959 |
| Hypoglycemia | 251 |
| Other disorders of soft tissue | 729 |
Medication classification codes for oral antihyperglycemic agents
| Drug class | Therapeutic classification code |
|---|---|
| Sulfonylureas | 213 |
| Other oral antihyperglycemic agents | |
| Biguanides | 214 |
| Thiazolidinediones | 271 |
| Alpha-glucosidase inhibitors | 216 |
| Meglitinides | 282 |
| Dipeptidyl peptidase 4 inhibitors | 371 |
| Antidiabetic combinations | 314 |