| Literature DB >> 36031821 |
Ana Barbosa1,2, Stephen Whiting1,2,3, Ding Ding4, João Brito5, Romeu Mendes1,2,3,5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Economic evaluation of physical activity interventions has become an important area for policymaking considering the high costs attributable to physical inactivity. However, the evidence for such interventions targeting type 2 diabetes control is scarce. Therefore, the present study aimed to synthesize economic evaluation studies of physical activity interventions for type 2 diabetes management.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36031821 PMCID: PMC9421413 DOI: 10.1093/eurpub/ckac074
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Public Health ISSN: 1101-1262 Impact factor: 4.424
Figure 1PRISMA 2020 flow diagram. PA, physical activity; T2D, type 2 diabetes
Characteristics of included studies
| Author, year | Country | Study design | Intervention group | Comparison group | Length | Setting | Condition | Sample ( | Age range (mean ± SD), years | Sex |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brun et al., 2008 | France | RCT | Exercise program (including brisk walking, jogging or gymnastics) | Usual care | 12 months | Community | T2D | 25 (13 IG, 12 CG) | 40–85 (59.7 ± 2) | M + F(26.0% F) |
| Coyle et al., 2012 | Canada | RCT | Aerobic exercise; resistance exercise; combined exercise | Usual care | 6 months | Community | T2D | 251 | 39–70 (54.2) | M + F(34.9% F) |
| Di Loreto et al., 2005 | Italy | Quasi-experimental | Exercise counseling + phone calls + sessions in outpatient clinic | None | 24 months | Community | T2D | 179 | >40 (62 ± 1) | M + F |
| Johnson et al., 2015 | Canada | Quasi-experimental | Pedometer-based walking program | Usual care with a pedometer but without instructions | 6 months | Primary Health Care | T2D | 186 (94 IG, 92 CG) | ≥18 (59.3 ± 8.3) | M + F(50.0% F) |
| Kaplan 1988 | USA | RCT | Exercise; diet; diet + exercise | Education | 18 months | Community | T2D | 76 | 53.8 ± 8.0 exercise; 54.9 ± 12.3 diet; 56.9 ± 8.9 diet + exercise; 54.5 ± 8.8 CG | M + F(57.9% F) |
| Kuo et al., 2021 | USA | RCT | Exercise program (EXER); CBT; combined exercise program (EXER) + CBT | Usual care | 15 months | Community | T2D with major depressive disorder | 140 (EXER 34, CBT 36, EXER + CBT 34, CG 36) | 56.0 ± 10.7 | M + F(76.0% F) |
| Marios et al., 2012 | Australia | RCT | Walking exercise program monitored by heart rate monitors + phone calls | Walking program | 6 months | Community | T2D | 26 (15 IG, 11 CG) | 18–80 (60.3 ± 9.4 IG, 65.1 ± 7.9 CG) | M + F(33.0% F in IG, 64.0% F in CG) |
| Pepin et al., 2020 | USA | Quasi-experimental | Aerobic + resistance + balance exercise program | None | 12 months | Community | Multimorbidity | 453 | 31–91 (67 ± 10) | M + F(6.0% F) |
| Sultana et al., 2018 | Malaysia | RCT | Aerobic exercise; combined (aerobic + resistance/strengthening) exercise program | Usual care | 14 weeks | Community; hospital | T2D | 75 (25 aerobic training, 25 combined, 25 CG) | 40–60 | M + F |
| Taylor et al., 2020 | UK | RCT | Exercise referral schemes + e-coachER (a pedometer + fridge magnet with PA recording sheets, and a user guide to access the web-based support in the form of seven ‘steps to health’) | Exercise referral schemes alone | 12 months | Community | Multimorbidity | 450 (224 IG, 226 CG) | 50 ± 13 IG, 51 ± 14 CG | M + F(64.0% F) |
CBT, cognitive behavioral therapy; CG, control group; F, female; IG, intervention group; M, male; RCT, randomized controlled trial; SD, standard deviation; T2D, type 2 diabetes.
Results of individual studies
| Study | Perspective | Economic evaluation | Cost analysis | Health outcomes | Findings | Authors’ interpretation of the economic evaluation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brun et al., 2008 | Healthcare | CEA | Costs
Direct costs: number and duration of hospitalizations, number of outpatient consultations with the family physician or specialists, drugs prescribed and analyses performed. Indirect costs: periods of not working, job loss and unemployment. | Body composition, fitness, metabolic balance, diabetes treatment. |
There was no significant change in body composition, blood pressure, lipid profile and glycated hemoglobin in IG, compared with CG; there was a significant reduction (26%) in insulin resistance from 3.39 ± 0.76 to 2.58 ± 0.47 ( Regarding fitness, the intervention prevented loss of maximum aerobic capacity (decreased in the CG, Indirect costs: none. Direct costs: IG required no hospitalizations, the CG spent 1.27 days in hospital ( The total cost of healthcare dropped by 50% in the IG ($1.87 ± 1 per day vs. $3.40 ± 1.67 per day, There was a significant reduction in sulfonyl urea treatments (−13.7 ± 6%, | Intervention is cost-saving. |
| Coyle et al., 2012 | Healthcare; societal |
CAI CEA assessed by ICER (the additional costs per QALYs) | Costs:
Intervention costs: lifetime membership to a health club and exercise specialist. Direct costs: costs of managing T2D with or without complications. | Life expectancy and quality-adjusted life expectancy. |
The combined exercise was the most expensive ($32445.18), followed by the aerobic exercise ($31797.08), the resistance exercise ($31027.47) and no exercise program ($25174.38). Both life expectancy and quality-adjusted life expectancy were highest for the combined exercise (life-years = 11.79, QALYs = 8.94) compared with aerobic exercise (life-years = 11.57, QALYs = 8.77), resistance exercise (life-years = 11.51, QALYs = 8.73), and no exercise program (life-years = 11.48, QALYs = 8.70). The ICER was $167682.01 per QALYs, $94615.96 per QALYs, and $30680.74 per QALYs for the resistance, aerobic and combined exercise programs, respectively, compared with no exercise program. The ICER for the combined program was $3882.08 per QALYs compared with aerobic exercise, and $6942.70 per QALYs compared with the resistance exercise. The combined exercise resulted in the greatest increase in life expectancy and quality-adjusted life expectancy. At a maximum value of $61.72 per QALYs, the combined exercise remained cost-effective compared with the three alternatives. | The combined exercise program is more cost-effective than aerobic, resistance or no exercise program in the improvement of T2D control |
| Di Loreto et al., 2005 | Healthcare; societal | CEA | Costs
Direct costs: expenses for medications and other costs usually paid by the National Health Service (e.g. counseling intervention, laboratory testing, hospitalization and outpatient care). Direct social costs include the value of participants' time spent in practicing exercise, cost of related items (shoes, fitness equipment, etc.), transportation to exercise places and admission to health clubs. Indirect social costs: include the time that participants reported as lost from work or usual activities as a result of counseling visits, illness or injury; each day lost to morbidity was valued at $100 | Improvement in the 10-year coronary heart disease risk, glycemic control and cardiovascular risk factors, reduction in medical and social costs. |
There were significant ( Improvements in glycemic control and cardiovascular risk factors were associated with significant ( METs per hour per week were inversely related with medical prescription costs ( A 3-mile daily walk was estimated to reduce medication costs by $550, other medical costs by $700, indirect social costs by $1100 and total costs by $2000, and to increase direct social costs by $400. After 24-month, the number of subjects on insulin therapy fell by 25% (before 59/179, after 44/179, There was a significant ( | Intervention is cost-saving. |
| Johnson et al., 2015 | Payer |
CAI CEA assessed by ICER (the additional cost per 1000 additional steps achieved). | Costs
Intervention costs: included activity time and training of the exercise specialists, administrative support personnel, recreation facilities, supplies, equipment and primary care networks’ overhead. Healthcare costs (direct costs): physician services, hospital outpatient visits and hospital inpatient admissions. | Change in daily steps. |
The total costs of the intervention were $274.21 per participant. IG incurred less cost in all categories (physician, out- and inpatient costs) than the CG during the follow-up period. The difference in total costs between-groups was $82.26 per participant. Daily steps increased for the IG compared with CG at 3 months (1292 vs. 418) and 6 months (1481 vs. 336), IG had an incremental rate of 919 steps, compared with an unadjusted increment of 393 steps in CG, The ICER was $89.52 per 1000 daily steps. | Intervention is cost-effective in increasing number of daily steps. |
| Kaplan, 1988 | Healthcare |
CAI CUA measured as the additional cost per well-year. | Costs
Direct costs: history and physical examination, laboratory charges, ECG evaluations, charges for behavior modification sessions, and charges for medical consultation. | Quality of well-being. |
The total costs of the program were approximately $1000 per participant. The diet + exercise group showed improvement in quality of well-being throughout the study, with a decrease at 12 months. The diet and exercise groups had experienced 0.06 units of improvement on the quality of well-being at 18 months, compared with −0.04 for the CG (difference equal to 0.092 quality of well-being units, The cost-utility ratio was $10 870 per well-year. | The diet and exercise groups have cost-utility, compared with other behavioral programs. |
| Kuo et al., 2021 | Healthcare; societal |
CAI CEA assessed by ICER (additional costs per QALY). | Costs
Intervention costs: implementing the interventions by CBT therapists and exercise trainers, passes/memberships to fitness facilities, participant time spent participating in sessions Medical costs (outpatient visits, emergency care and room, hospitalization services; laboratory testing; and self-monitoring of blood glucose); Informal healthcare costs: time costs of informal caregivers in caring for patients, or transportation costs. | Incidence of clinical outcomes (e.g. stroke, cardiovascular death, myocardial infarction), life expectancy and quality-adjusted life expectancy. |
Per participant, intervention-related costs over 15 months were $1615, $1532, $1983 and $2138 for the CG, exercise program, CBT and exercise program + CBT groups, respectively. Over a 10-year period, the exercise program + CBT was associated with the longest quality-adjusted life expectancy (5.355 QALYs), followed by exercise program (5.047), CBT (4.955) and CG (4.665). The exercise program resulted in the lowest total costs over 10 years ($75714). Healthcare perspective: compared with CG, the exercise program strategy saved $313 per patient and produced 0.382 more QALYs and the exercise program + CBT saved $403 more and gained 0.690 more QALY (ICER of $600 per QALY). Compared with exercise program, exercise program + CBT cost $716 more and gained 0.308 more QALY, (ICER of around $2300 per QALY gained). Societal perspective: the exercise program strategy saved $126. Compared with CG, the ICER of exercise program and exercise program + CBT was around $800 and $2000 per QALY gained. Compared with exercise program, the ICER for exercise program + CBT was around $3500 per QALY. | Exercise program and exercise program + CBT interventions are cost-saving; exercise program + CBT is more cost-effective than exercise program or CBT alone. |
| Marios et al., 2012 | Healthcare | CAI | Costs
Intervention costs: included heart rate monitors, exercise test consumables, physician supervision of exercise tests and salary for exercise physiologist. | Exercise adherence (number of hours of exercise completed), improvements in peak maximal oxygen uptake, glycated hemoglobin and quality of life; cost-effectiveness of exercise training compared with pharmacological therapy. |
The total cost of administering the telemonitored exercise program was $27 300, or $1050 per patient. Costs per patient are similar to the costs that would be borne by the patient for using low dose insulin ($800) and a blood pressure agent ($130) for 6 months. IG completed a mean weekly volume of 138 min, moderate intensity exercise, while CG patients completed 58 minutes weekly ( In the IG, peak of maximal oxygen uptake increased (5.5%), and treadmill time (18%) and maximum heart rate (3%) were significantly greater at 6 months, compared with CG ( Glycated hemoglobin did not change significantly after 6 months ( No significant between-group changes were seen for quality of life. | The amount invested in intervention is comparable with other health interventions and it improved some health outcomes. |
| Pepin et al., 2020 | Healthcare | CEA | Costs
Direct costs: included the costs of medication. Net changes over 12 months in cost were calculated by subtracting the cost related to increases from the cost related to decreases in fills and associated costs for the prescriptions fills. | Changes in medication use and cost of medication classes commonly prescribed in the management of chronic conditions. |
After 12 months, participants reduced the number of active prescriptions by 25%, 65% had no change and 10% increased diabetes medication, a net change of 14% decrease in diabetes medications. Fifty-five percent of patients had a decrease in their overall number of fills, with an average associated cost decrease of $473 per fill, or $117.254 overall. A net reduction was found in diabetes medications ($2.212). | Intervention is cost-saving. |
| Sultana et al., 2018 | Payer |
CAI CEA assessed by ICER (the additional cost per health status) | Costs
Direct costs: included the costs related to program implementation and running. | Glycated hemoglobin and health status. |
Direct costs: $2193.71 and $2147.60 for combined and aerobic exercise interventions, respectively. There were significant improvements in glycated hemoglobin between aerobic exercise versus CG, and combined exercise versus CG, There were significant improvements in health status between aerobic exercise versus combined exercise ( The ICER of combined exercise was $5.56 per health status; ICER of aerobic exercise intervention was $827.03 per health status. | Combined exercise program is more cost-effective than aerobic exercise or CG. |
| Taylor et al., 2020 | Healthcare; societal |
CAI CUA measured as the additional cost per QALYs CEA assessed by ICER (the additional cost per change in moderate and vigorous PA minutes). | Costs (direct and indirect):
Intervention costs: set-up and design of the intervention; delivery of the intervention including handbooks, pedometers, the guide for using the LifeGuide platform, technical support and maintenance of the website; consultation provided by an exercise specialist and staff support to participants Direct and .indirect costs: primary and secondary health service use, prescriptions, hospital admissions, accident and emergency visits; time and money expenses borne by participants about participation in the intervention (e.g. time spent on web platform), visit to exercise specialist and PA. | Quality of life, and minutes of moderate and vigorous PA in ≥10-min bouts. |
The average cost per participant was $1970.30 and $2607.19 in the CG and IG, respectively, not statistically significant. The IG (mean 0.662, 95% CI 0.625–0.701) had more QALYs than the CG (mean 0.637, 95% CI 0.585–0.688). The difference in QALYs (0.026, 95% CI 0.013–0.040) between groups was statistically significant. Compared with the CG, the IG cost an additional $24552.36 per QALYs. IG had a weak indicative effect on total weekly minutes of moderate and vigorous PA in bouts of ≥10 min (mean difference 11.8 min, 95% CI –2.1 to 26.0 min), compared with CG. Compared with the CG, the IG cost $25.58 per additional minute of moderate and vigorous PA in a bout of ≥10 min. Compared with the base-case findings, subgroup analysis showed the intervention to be more cost-effective in groups that reported that T2D was the primary reason for referral (ICER $21645.62 per QALYs). |
Cost-utility of IG compared with CG in increasing the quality of life. Cost-effectiveness of IG compared with CG in increasing minutes of moderate and vigorous PA ≥ 10-min bouts. |
CAI, cost analysis of interventions; CBT, cognitive behavioral therapy; CEA, cost-effectiveness analysis; CG, comparator group; CUA, cost-utility analysis; IG, intervention group; MET, metabolic equivalent of task; PA, physical activity; QALYs, quality-adjusted life years; T2D, type 2 diabetes.
Summary of result of the economic evaluation in individual studies
| Study | Result of the economic evaluation |
|---|---|
| Brun et al., 2008 | Cost-saving |
| Coyle et al., 2012 | Cost-effectiveness |
| Di Loreto et al., 2005 | Cost-saving |
| Johnson et al., 2015 | Cost-effectiveness |
| Kaplan, 1988 | Cost-utility |
| Kuo et al., 2021 | Cost-saving |
| Cost-effectiveness | |
| Marios et al., 2012 | Cost-effectiveness |
| Pepin et al., 2020 | Cost-saving |
| Sultana et al., 2018 | Cost-effectiveness |
| Taylor et al., 2020 | Cost-utility |
| Cost-effectiveness |