| Literature DB >> 32385543 |
Rebecca L Thomas1, Thomas G Winfield2, Matthew Prettyjohns2, Frank D Dunstan3, Wai-Yee Cheung4, Philippa M Anderson5, Rajesh Peter6, Stephen D Luzio4, David R Owens4.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Examine the health and economic impact of extending screening intervals in people with Type 2 diabetes (T2DM) and Type 1 diabetes (T1DM) without diabetes-related retinopathy (DR).Entities:
Keywords: Cost-utility analysis; Diabetic retinopathy; Economic impact; Screening
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32385543 PMCID: PMC7423794 DOI: 10.1007/s10198-020-01191-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Health Econ ISSN: 1618-7598
Resources used in screening and treatment of DR
| Procedure/condition | Cost |
|---|---|
| Screening visit in DR screening service in Wales | £33 [ |
| Hospital-based DR screening visit | £106 [ |
| Optical Coherence Tomography (per scan) | £117 [ |
| Focal Laser/panretinal photocoagulation laser | £131 [ |
| Anti-VEGF treatment for maculopathy (drug + administration costs) | £822 (£742 + £80) [ |
| Vitrectomy | £989 [ |
| Sight loss (person remains living at home) per annum | £1483 [ |
| Sight loss (person resident in care home) per annum | £6972 [ |
RDR utility values taken from Lund et al. [30]
| RDR state | EQ-5D values [ |
|---|---|
| Pre proliferative | 0.7915 |
| Maculopathy | 0.7365 |
| Pre proliferative and maculopathy | 0.7365 |
| Easy to treat proliferative | 0.7047 |
| Easy to treat proliferative and maculopathy | 0.693 |
| High risk proliferative | 0.7047 |
| High risk proliferative and maculopathy with visual impairment | 0.693 |
| Severe proliferative | 0.7047 |
| Severe proliferative with maculopathy and vision loss | 0.693 |
| Severe loss of vision | 0.6218 |
Fig. 1The Markov model structure
Demographics of the DESW population 2003–2013 included in the statistical analysis to estimate the transition probabilities
| T1DM (1232) | T2DM (26,812) | |
|---|---|---|
| Age mean (SD) | 22.7 (11.6) | 62.3 (12.1) |
| Gender: male % | 53.8 | 56.1 |
| Known duration of diabetes mean (SD) | 7.8 (9.4) | 4.2 (4.1) |
| HbA1c (mmol/mol) mean | 71.6 | 58.5 |
| HbA1c (%) mean (SD) | 8.7 (1.6) | 7.5 (1.2) |
| Metformin (as one treatment) | 1.6 | 60.5 |
| Sulphonylurea (as one treatment) | 9.8 | 22.0 |
| Insulin alone | 88.5 | 4.1 |
| Systolic BP mean (SD) | 121.7 (9.5) | 138.2 (10.6) |
| Diastolic BP mean (SD) | 71.8 (5.6) | 79.2 (6.3) |
| Total cholesterol | 4.5 (0.7) | 4.6 (0.8) |
| HDL-cholesterol | 1.5 (0.4) | 1.2 (0.3) |
| LDL-cholesterol | 2.5 (0.6) | 2.4 (0.7) |
| Triglycerides | 1.3 (0.6) | 2.1 (1.0) |
| eGFR | 107.9 (22.8) | 79.5 (18.7) |
| BMI mean (SD) | 24.1 (4.6) | 32.3 (6.3) |
| Smokers: yes % | 3.8 | 38.7 |
Estimated DCERs for increasing annual screening to biennial screening by HbA1c level and duration of diabetes
| HbA1c level mmol/mol (%) | Duration of diabetes (years) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 48 (6.5) | 64 (8.0) | 72 (8.7)a | 80 (9.5) | < 6 | 6–12 | > 12 | |
| T1DM (DCER QALY £) | 94,696c | 37,646c | 23,446c | 11,089 | 83,856c | 23,446 | 13,340 |
aMean HbA1c value for the population with T1DM
bMean HbA1c value for the population with T2DM
cChanging to biennial screening ICER considered cost effective at above £20,000 per QALY lost threshold