| Literature DB >> 32607728 |
Michael Laxy1,2,3,4, Ping Zhang5, Boon Peng Ng6, Hui Shao5,7, Mohammed K Ali5,8, Ann Albright5, Edward W Gregg9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Lifestyle change interventions (LCI) for prevention of type 2 diabetes are covered by Medicare, but rarely by US Medicaid programs that constitute the largest public payer system in the USA. We estimate the long-term health and economic implications of implementing LCIs in state Medicaid programs.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32607728 PMCID: PMC7518987 DOI: 10.1007/s40258-020-00565-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Appl Health Econ Health Policy ISSN: 1175-5652 Impact factor: 2.561
Summary of relevant model assumptions
DPP Diabetes Prevention Program, LCI lifestyle change intervention, ESRD end-stage renal disease, FPG fasting plasma glucose, HbA1c hemoglobin A1c, BMI body mass index, NHANES National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, NHIS National Health Interview Survey ARIC Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study; CARDIA Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults Study, MEPS Medical Expenditure Panel Survey, QALYs quality adjusted life years
aAlabama, California, Connecticut, Florida, Iowa, Illinois, New York, and Oklahoma; bPopulation characteristics of the Medicaid population at high risk for type 2 diabetes were derived by matching individual-level Medicaid claims with data from NHANES; cIncidence of type 2 diabetes in this population was directly estimated from the NHIS, the ARIC Study, and the CARDIA Study; dPre–after DPP-like LCI weight-loss data from studies in the Medicaid population [18, 35] were combined with data on weight loss and type 2 diabetes incidence reduction from the original DPP and other RCTs [7, 41] to infer the expected diabetes incidence reduction that results from the intervention; dCosts of delivering DPP-like LCI are based on cost estimates from previous studies and on current reimbursement practices [22, 54]; eCosts for treatment of diabetes and diabetic complications were directly estimated from Medicaid claims data from the states of Alabama, California, Connecticut, Florida, Iowa, Illinois, New York, and Oklahoma; fQuality of life decrements were directly estimated from data from the Medical Panel Expenditure Surveys (MEPS)
Numbers and characteristics of medicaid beneficiaries eligible for DPP-like lifestyle change interventions
AL Alabama, CA California, CT Connecticut, FL Florida, IA Iowa, IL Illinois, NY New York, OK Oklahoma, M million
aNon-disability-based, full-benefit beneficiaries aged 19–64 years
bBody mass index ≥ 25 kg/m2 and either fasting plasma glucose of 110–140 mg/dL or hemoglobin A1c of 5.7–6.4%
Hypertension: blood pressure ≥ 140/90 mmHg; high cholesterol: total cholesterol ≥ 200 mg/dL
Total and incremental healthcare costs and health effects of DPP-like LCI per participant from a healthcare system perspective: average of eight states
Results are based on simulation scenarios from a Markov-style decision analytic simulation model with default and alternative assumptions on crucial model parameters (compare Table 1)
Dominant: less costly and more beneficial
DPP Diabetes Prevention Program, ICER incremental cost-effectiveness-ratio, LCI lifestyle change intervention, LYs life years, QALYs quality-adjusted life years
Fig. 1a Cost-effectiveness plane for the combined data of the eight study states with pairs of QALYs and cost estimates from n = 250 bootstrap samples. Green dots show bootstrap samples of pairs of QALYs and cost estimates over a 5-year time horizon, red dots show bootstrap samples over a 10-year time horizon, and blue dots show bootstrap samples over a 25-year time horizon. The large diamonds represent the mean of cost QALY and cost estimates. The gray dotted lines show the willingness to pay thresholds of US$50,000/QALY and US$100,000/QALY; realizations below these lines are considered to be cost-effective under the given willingness to pay threshold. b Cost-effectiveness plane with pairs of incremental QALYs and cost estimates for each of the eight study states. The large blue diamonds represent the pairs of population size-weighted incremental QALYs and cost estimates for the combined data of the eight study states (identical to 1a). The green circle frames the state-specific results of the analyses over a 5-year time horizon, the red circle frames the state-specific results of the analyses over a 10-year time horizon, and the blue circle frames the state-specific results of the analyses over a 25-year time horizon. The gray dotted lines show the willingness to pay thresholds of US$50,000/QALY and US$100,000/QALY; realizations below these lines are considered to be cost-effective under the given willingness to pay threshold. c Cost-effectiveness acceptability curves for the combined data of the eight study states with the WTP on the vertical axis and the probability of the intervention being cost-effective at a given WTP on the horizontal axis. Curves are derived on the basis of net benefit values from n = 250 bootstrap samples of incremental cost and QALY estimates. The green curve shows the 5-year time horizon, the red curve shows the 10-year time horizon, and the blue curve shows the 25-year time horizon. The gray dotted lines show the willingness to pay thresholds of US$50,000/QALY and US$100,000/QALY. d Curves of the per participant return on investment for the combined data of the eight study states with the time horizon on the horizontal axis and the accumulated costs on the vertical axis. The accumulated costs represent the value of upfront costs of US$800 for the intervention minus cost savings associated with prevention of diabetes and complications. The blue line represents the base-case scenario from a healthcare system perspective, the gray and red curves show the ROI from a Medicaid perspective assuming that beneficiaries are insured for 60–100% of their lifetime under Medicaid before they lose eligibility at age 65 years. Negative accumulated costs indicate a positive return on investment. * AL Alabama, CA California, CT Connecticut, FL Florida, IA Iowa, IL Illinois, NY New York, OK Oklahoma. LCI lifestyle change intervention, QALY quality adjusted life year, ICER incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, CE cost-effectiveness, WTP willingness to pay
The 25-year population-level health and cost impact assuming a 20% DPP-like LCI participation in eligible Medicaid beneficiaries: sum of 8 states
QALY quality-adjusted life year
aSum of costs for referral and intervention
bSum of costs for referral and intervention minus savings for prevention of treatment for type 2 diabetes and complications assuming that all savings from preventing type 2 diabetes and its complications in the US Healthcare System are captured
cSum of costs for referral and intervention minus savings for prevention of treatment for type 2 diabetes and complications assuming that only savings from preventing type 2 diabetes and its complications in the Medicaid system are captured. It is assumed that beneficiaries are insured for 72% of their time under Medicaid until they turn 65 years
| Eighteen percent of the non-disability-based adult Medicaid population is at high risk for developing type 2 diabetes. |
| Life-style change intervention programs to prevent type 2 diabetes in Medicaid beneficiaries at high risk for type 2 diabetes are likely to be cost effective in the long-term from a healthcare system perspective. |
| The cost effectiveness is lower from a narrow Medicaid perspective and the population-level health impact of intervening in beneficiaries at high risk for type 2 diabetes is small. |