| Literature DB >> 34862962 |
Rose J Geurten1, Jeroen N Struijs2,3, Arianne M J Elissen4, Henk J G Bilo5, Chantal van Tilburg6, Dirk Ruwaard4.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to describe the healthcare utilization and expenditures related to medical specialist care and medication of the entire type 2 diabetes population in the Netherlands in detail.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34862962 PMCID: PMC8864033 DOI: 10.1007/s41669-021-00308-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacoecon Open ISSN: 2509-4262
The Dutch type 2 diabetes population 2016–2018
| 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Annual prevalence, | 880,121 | 890,682 | 900,522 |
| New patients, | 58,606 | 57,877 | 57,411 |
| Loss to follow-up, | |||
| Deceased | 38,042 | 38,962 | 40,050 |
| Other reasonsa | 19,055 | 9274 | 8609 |
| Mean age, years (SD) | 67.4 (±12.4) | 68.5 (±12.4) | 68.7 (±12.3) |
| Sex, female, | 417,912 (47.5) | 419,658 (47.1) | 420,988 (46.7) |
SD standard deviation
aOther reasons for loss to follow-up include people who no longer met the inclusion criteria, people admitted to a nursing home, and people who emigrated. Calculated as (number of patients y − 1) + (number of new patients y) – (number of deceased y − ) – (number of patients y)
Specialist care utilization and expenditures in 2018
| Utilization (no. of patients) [ | Mean number of DTCs per patient | Total expenditures [million €] (%) | Mean expenditures per treated patient (€) ± SD | Median per treated patient expenditures [€] (P5; P95) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ophthalmology | 241,981 (26.9) | 1.8 | 141 (5.6) | 581 ± 1077 | 160 (73.0; 2634) |
| Internal medicine | 209,197 (23.2) | 2.4 | 439 (17.6) | 2099 ± 6619 | 647 (206.2; 7515.8) |
| Cardiology | 190,200 (21.1) | 1.9 | 391 (15.6) | 2055 ± 4676 | 488 (166.3; 10,490.4) |
| Surgery | 131,292 (14.6) | 1.6 | 366 (14.6) | 2786 ± 5340 | 572 (143.4; 12,711.2) |
| Neurology | 96,310 (10.7) | 1.4 | 129 (5.2) | 1344 ± 2401 | 558 (161.9; 6856.1) |
| Dermatology | 87,416 (9.7) | 1.6 | 39 (1.6) | 451 ± 621 | 228 (102.7; 1513) |
| Orthopedics | 83,066 (9.2) | 1.6 | 167 (6.7) | 2013 ± 3592 | 493 (132.0; 9446.0) |
| Pulmonary medicine | 82,505 (9.2) | 1.9 | 171 (6.8) | 2073 ± 4131 | 749 (162.4; 8100.2) |
| Urology | 71,289 (7.9) | 1.8 | 110 (4.4) | 1538 ± 2862 | 568 (119; 6772.7) |
| Gastroenterology and liver disorders | 65,288 (7.3) | 1.5 | 114 (4.5) | 1738 ± 3122 | 911 (202; 6914.7) |
| Eye, nose, throat medicine | 63,347 (7.0) | 1.4 | 38 (1.5) | 593 ± 1643 | 302 (105.6; 1936.9) |
| Rheumatology | 34,533 (3.8) | 1.8 | 24 (1.0) | 696 ± 788 | 501 (217.5; 1583.0) |
| Geriatrics | 25,862 (2.9) | 1.3 | 55 (2.2) | 2137 ± 3281 | 1,092 (262.2; 7659.6) |
| Rehabilitation medicine | 24,982 (2.8) | 1.8 | 68 (2.7) | 2700 ± 8015 | 443 (165.9; 11,560.6) |
| Gynecology | 24,816 (2.8) | 1.6 | 31 (1.2) | 1230 ± 2201 | 354 (173.7; 5505.1) |
| Anesthesiology | 23,039 (2.6) | 1.8 | 30 (1.2) | 1319 ± 2248 | 980 (224.0; 3156.2) |
| Plastic surgery | 22,552 (2.5) | 1.5 | 26 (1.0) | 1140 ± 1500 | 713 (113.4; 3919.2) |
| Othera | 42,532 (4.7) | 1.4 | 161 (6.4) | ||
| Total | 2498 (100.0) | 3893 |
DTCs diagnosis–treatment combination, SD standard deviation, P5 5th percentile, P95 95th percentile
a‘Other’ category includes hospital-based specialties that were each used by < 1.5% of all patients with type 2 diabetes in 2018: neurosurgery, cardiopulmonary medicine, pediatrics, allergy medicine, radiotherapy, radiology, psychiatry, clinical genetics, audiology
Fig. 1Number of MS used by type 2 diabetes patients who used one or more MS (n = 641,515) in 2018. MS medical specialties
Fig. 2Total medication and diabetes medication utilization in 2018. GLD glucose-lowering drug
Fig. 3a Total medication expenditures; b diabetes medication expenditures in 2018. GLD glucose-lowering drug, GLP-1 glucagon-like peptide 1
Mean and median per treated patient medication expenditures in 2018
| Mean expenditures per treated patient [€] (SD) | Median per treated patient expenditures [€] (P5; P95) | |
|---|---|---|
| Total medication | ||
| GLDs (A10) and other medication | 1140 ± 2383 | 701 (112; 3175) |
| GLDs (A10) | 162 ± 282 | 53 (14; 692) |
| Other medication, but no GLDs (A10) | 658 ± 1899 | 321 (37; 2003) |
| No medication | – | – |
| Diabetes medication | ||
| Oral medication (A10B) | 143 ± 242 | 62 (20; 583) |
| Oral medication (A10A) and insulins (A10B) | 812 ± 655 | 632 (178; 2106) |
| Insulins (A10A) | 649 ± 490 | 539 (105; 1558) |
| Insulin/GLP-1 (A10AE54 or A10AE56) | 1816 ± 814 | 1729 (698; 3233) |
| No GLDs | – | – |
SD standard deviation, P5 5th percentile, P95 95th percentile, GLDs glucose-lowering drugs, GLP-1 glucagon-like peptide 1
| Specialist care and medication use patterns of patients with type 2 diabetes are heterogeneous, indicating diverse care needs and the potential value of more tailored, patient-centered care. |
| A small part of the type 2 diabetes population is responsible for a large share of total expenditures. Further insight is needed into the characteristics of these ‘high-need, high-cost’ patients. |
| Exploiting the value of all-payer claims databases for diabetes cost studies can support decision making and promote the sustainability of healthcare systems. |