Medical expenditure trajectory and HbA1c progression prior to and after clinical diagnosis of type 2 diabetes in a commercially insured population in the USA

Author:

Pagán LorissaORCID,Yang Wenya,Shao Hui,Wang Yu,Zhang Ping

Abstract

IntroductionMedical expenditures of individuals with type 2 diabetes escalate before clinical diagnosis. How increases in medical expenditures are related to glucose levels remains unclear. We examined changes in HbA1c and medical expenditures in years prior to and shortly after type 2 diabetes diagnosis.Research design and methodsUsing insurance claims and laboratory test results from a commercially insured population in the USA, we built three (2014, 2015, 2016) longitudinal cohorts with type 2 diabetes up to 10 years before and 2 years after the diagnosis (index year). We identified diabetes diagnosis using International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision and Tenth Revision codes and antidiabetic medication use. We ran two individual fixed regression models with annual total medical expenditures and average HbA1c values as dependent variables and number of years from diagnosis as the main independent variable and examined the risk-adjusted movement of the outcomes.ResultsOur study included 9847 individuals (83 526 person-years). Medical expenditures and HbA1c levels increased before and peaked at the diagnosis year. Medical expenditures were $8644 lower 10 years and $5781 lower 1 year before diagnosis compared with the index year. HbA1c was 12.18 mmol/mol (1.11 percentage points) and 3.49 mmol/mol (0.32 percentage points) lower, respectively. Average annual increases in medical expenditures and HbA1c values over the prediagnosis period were $318 and 0.97 mmol/mol (0.09 percentage points), respectively.ConclusionsMedical expenditures and HbA1c values followed similar trajectories before and after diabetes diagnosis. Our results can inform economic evaluations of programs and policies aimed at preventing type 2 diabetes.

Funder

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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