| Literature DB >> 33306169 |
Johan Jendle1, Åsa Ericsson2, Jens Gundgaard3, Jonas Bech Møller3, William J Valentine4, Barnaby Hunt4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Real-world evidence has demonstrated improved glycemic control and insulin management following introduction of smart insulin pens in a Swedish type 1 diabetes (T1D) population. To understand the implications for healthcare costs and expected health outcomes, this analysis evaluated the long-term cost-effectiveness of introducing smart insulin pens to standard-of-care T1D treatment (standard care) from a Swedish societal perspective.Entities:
Keywords: Diabetes complications; Diabetes self-management; Diabetes technology; Digital health; Health technology assessment; Healthcare economics; Hypoglycemia; Insulin therapy; Type 1 diabetes; eHealth
Year: 2020 PMID: 33306169 PMCID: PMC7843677 DOI: 10.1007/s13300-020-00980-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes Ther ISSN: 1869-6961 Impact factor: 2.945
Simulated cohorts
| Characteristic | Parameter | Unit | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age | 41.6 | Years | SWE-NDR [ |
| Duration of diabetes | 26.1 | Years | SWE-NDR [ |
| Male | 0.545 | Proportion | SWE-NDR [ |
| HbA1ca | |||
| Smart pens arm | 8.27/66.9 | Percentage/mmol/mol | Adolfsson et al |
| Standard care arm | 8.93/74.1 | Percentage/mmol/mol | Adolfsson et al |
| NSHE | |||
| Smart pens arm | 3287.25 | Events per 100 patient-years of observation | |
| Standard care arm | 6574.50 | ||
| Blood pressure | |||
| Systolic | 128.7 | mmHg | SWE-NDR [ |
| Diastolic | 73.6 | mmHg | SWE-NDR [ |
| Cholesterol | |||
| Total | 146.2 | mg/dL | SWE-NDR [ |
| HDL | 62.6 | mg/dL | SWE-NDR [ |
| LDL | 103.2 | mg/dL | SWE-NDR [ |
| Triglycerides | 95.6 | mg/dL | SWE-NDR [ |
| BMI | 25.3 | kg/m2 | SWE-NDR [ |
| Smokers | 0.122 | Proportion | SWE-NDR [ |
| Cigarettesb | 14 | Number per day | Population data [ |
| Alcohol consumption | 5.98/177 | Fluid ounces per week/mL per week | Population data [ |
| Ethnicity | |||
| Whitec | 1.000 | Proportion | Assumed |
Data are mean, unless otherwise stated
BMI body mass index, HbA1c glycated hemoglobin, HDL high-density lipoprotein, LDL low-density lipoprotein, NSHE nonsevere hypoglycemic events, SWE-NDR Swedish National Diabetes Register
aHbA1c data were derived from time in range and converted using a published regression equation [21]; the HbA1c value for the smart pens arm was calculated as 8.933–0.666 [derived treatment effect from the regression equation] = 8.267%, with all figures rounded to 2 decimal places
bOnly applies to the smokers
cThese data were not collected in the prospective, noninterventional Swedish study, so were assumed to be 100% white for simplicity in this analysis
Results of the base-case analysis
| Smart insulin pen | Standard care | Difference | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Outcomes, mean (SD) | |||
| Discounted direct costs (SEK) | 635,599 (19,290) | 759,869 (21,883) | − 124,270 |
| Discounted combined costs (SEK) | 1,541,648 (55,546) | 2,039,643 (61,753) | − 497,995 |
| Discounted life expectancy (years) | 20.20 (0.19) | 19.31 (0.20) | + 0.90 |
| Discounted quality-adjusted life expectancy (QALYs) | 14.74 (0.14) | 13.59 (0.14) | + 1.15 |
| Cumulative incidence of complications, % | |||
| Cardiovascular disease | |||
| Myocardial infarction | 15.04 | 16.20 | − 1.16 |
| Angina | 12.22 | 13.09 | − 0.87 |
| Stroke | 3.22 | 3.41 | − 0.19 |
| Congestive heart failure | 3.83 | 4.07 | − 0.24 |
| Peripheral vascular disease | 16.45 | 16.79 | − 0.34 |
| Renal disease | |||
| Microalbuminuria | 41.91 | 58.50 | − 16.59 |
| Gross proteinuria | 21.71 | 33.28 | − 11.57 |
| End-stage renal disease | 8.30 | 12.74 | − 4.44 |
| Death following end-stage renal disease | 6.12 | 9.67 | − 3.55 |
| Eye disease | |||
| Background diabetic retinopathy | 76.61 | 88.25 | − 11.64 |
| Proliferative diabetic retinopathy | 22.26 | 38.95 | − 16.69 |
| Macular edema | 42.79 | 58.87 | − 16.08 |
| Severe vision loss | 32.27 | 42.80 | − 10.53 |
| Cataract | 21.81 | 20.64 | + 1.17 |
| Neuropathic complications | |||
| Neuropathy | 63.51 | 75.26 | − 11.75 |
| Diabetic foot complications | |||
| Foot ulcer | 47.23 | 57.48 | − 10.25 |
| Amputation | 17.70 | 21.78 | − 4.08 |
QALY quality-adjusted life-year, SEK 2018 Swedish krona
Fig. 1Projected mean time to onset of complications. Base-case analysis, treatment effects were maintained for patient lifetimes
Fig. 2Mean a direct costs and b combined (direct and indirect) costs over patients’ lifetimes. Base-case analysis, treatment effects were maintained for patient lifetimes. SEK, 2018 Swedish krona
Results of the sensitivity analyses
| Analysis | Discounted direct costs (SEK) | Discounted combined costs (SEK) | Discounted quality-adjusted life expectancy (QALYs) | ICER (SEK per QALY)a | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Smart insulin pen | Standard care | Difference | Smart insulin pen | Standard care | Difference | Smart insulin pen | Standard care | Difference | ||
| Base case | 635,599 | 759,869 | − 124,270 | 1,541,648 | 2,039,643 | − 497,995 | 14.74 | 13.59 | + 1.15 | Smart insulin pens dominant |
| 3-year time horizon | 39,204 | 42,490 | − 3286 | 95,520 | 141,403 | − 45,884 | 2.21 | 2.17 | + 0.04 | Smart insulin pens dominant |
| 5-year time horizon | 68,034 | 76,006 | − 7972 | 171,264 | 251,522 | − 80,258 | 3.55 | 3.47 | + 0.08 | Smart insulin pens dominant |
| 10-year time horizon | 147,293 | 172,482 | − 25,190 | 403,989 | 579,865 | − 175,876 | 6.45 | 6.26 | + 0.19 | Smart insulin pens dominant |
| Baseline HbA1c of 7.96% (64 mmol/mol) | 503,716 | 590,549 | − 86,833 | 1,232,903 | 1,630,768 | − 397,865 | 15.80 | 14.86 | + 0.94 | Smart insulin pens dominant |
| Baseline HbA1c of 7.1% (54 mmol/mol) | 425,384 | 483,414 | − 58,030 | 1,046,641 | 1,383,286 | − 336,645 | 16.52 | 15.74 | + 0.78 | Smart insulin pens dominant |
| HbA1c reduction of 0.4% (4 mmol/mol)b | 684,446 | 759,869 | − 75,422 | 1,656,833 | 2,039,643 | − 382,810 | 14.38 | 13.59 | + 0.80 | Smart insulin pens dominant |
| HbA1c reduction of 0.8% (9 mmol/mol)b | 615,900 | 759,869 | − 143,969 | 1,489,429 | 2,039,643 | − 550,214 | 14.91 | 13.59 | + 1.33 | Smart insulin pens dominant |
| HbA1c treatment effect not applied | 758,052 | 759,869 | − 1817 | 1,840,469 | 2,039,643 | − 199,173 | 13.83 | 13.59 | + 0.24 | Smart insulin pens dominant |
| Hypoglycemia difference not applied | 649,065 | 759,869 | − 110,803 | 1,755,774 | 2,039,643 | − 283,869 | 14.48 | 13.59 | + 0.90 | Smart insulin pens dominant |
| Treatment switched after 3 yearsc | 635,598 | 663,626 | − 28,028 | 1,541,634 | 1,648,193 | − 106,559 | 14.74 | 14.48 | + 0.25 | Smart insulin pens dominant |
| Treatment switched after 5 yearsc | 635,598 | 680,623 | − 45,025 | 1,541,635 | 1,718,398 | − 176,763 | 14.74 | 14.33 | + 0.40 | Smart insulin pens dominant |
| Treatment switched after 10 yearsc | 635,598 | 707,083 | − 71,485 | 1,541,635 | 1,848,503 | − 306,868 | 14.74 | 14.04 | + 0.70 | Smart insulin pens dominant |
HbA1c glycated hemoglobin, ICER incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, QALY quality-adjusted life-year, SEK 2018 Swedish krona
aICER is reported for both direct and combined costs and, in all sensitivity analysis simulations, the outcome of dominance was the same when either direct or combined costs were considered
bFor the smart insulin pen relative to standard care
cIn the standard care simulation arm to smart insulin pen use, performed by removing differences in HbA1c, hypoglycemic event rates, and treatment costs from the time of switch until the end of the time horizon
| Digital health solutions are becoming increasingly established for chronic disease management, particularly in the treatment of diabetes; however, there is a need for evidence to support healthcare payers in making value-based decisions on the new digital technologies |
| Smart insulin pens record the timing and dose of insulin injections, while their data can be integrated with continuous glucose monitoring to improve diabetes self-management and address an unmet need for patients to become more actively engaged with their diabetes care |
| The aim of the present modeling analysis—which was informed by clinical data from a Swedish prospective, noninterventional study—was to evaluate the long-term cost-effectiveness of introducing smart insulin pens to standard-of-care treatment for type 1 diabetes (standard care) from a Swedish societal perspective |
| Projections showed that smart insulin pens were associated with lower healthcare costs and improved health outcomes (i.e., a dominant treatment option) versus standard care in the base-case analysis and across all of the sensitivity analyses conducted |
| Our findings suggest that smart insulin pens are likely to be a good use of healthcare resources in Sweden in this patient population with type 1 diabetes, and they add to a growing body of evidence that digital technologies can add value to the treatment of chronic diseases |