Objectives: To quantify the incremental burden of patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) and a hypoglycemic event in Taiwan using the National Health Insurance Research Database.
Methods: Data from 2000 through 2013 with an index period of 2001 through 2012 from the National Health Insurance Research Database's 2-million-patient sample were used. Using a nested case-control study design, patients were indexed if they reported a diagnosis of T2DM during the index period. Patients with T2DM with a hypoglycemic event (defined by International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification codes) during the index period were identified. Patients with T2DM without a hypoglycemic event were included to form a 4:1 (controls to cases) matched cohort on the basis of age, sex, the Charlson Comorbidity Index, and the T2DM diagnosis date. Both cohorts were followed up for 1 year after the hypoglycemic event and had their treatment utilization, resource utilization, and healthcare costs measured.
Results: A total of 144 213 patients with T2DM were identified, with 3 651 (2.5%) recording a hypoglycemic event. Before matching, patients with T2DM with a hypoglycemic event were, on average, older (64.2 vs 56.6) and had higher mean CCI scores (2.4 vs 1.9) than did patients with T2DM without a hypoglycemic event. After matching, patients with T2DM and a hypoglycemic event incurred an additional $1353 in average direct healthcare costs during the 1 year of follow-up compared with the matched cohort. Patients with T2DM with hypoglycemia also spent an additional 5.9 days in the hospital during the follow-up period compared with the matched cohort.
Conclusions: Patients with hypoglycemic events, on average, experienced a substantially higher economic burden than did their counterparts without a hypoglycemic event during the same period.
Keywords: Hypoglycemia; Taiwan; resource utilization; type 2 diabetes mellitus.
Copyright © 2019 ISPOR--The professional society for health economics and outcomes research. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.