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Costs and consequences associated with newer medications for glycemic control in type 2 diabetes.

Diabetes Care · 2010

Last updated 2026-05-28

A study compared three diabetes treatments—glyburide, exenatide, and sitagliptin—as second-line therapies. Exenatide and sitagliptin improved quality-adjusted life years by 0.09 and 0.12, respectively, compared to glyburide. However, exenatide cost more while providing fewer benefits, while sitagliptin cost $169,572 per additional quality-adjusted life year gained.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalDiabetes Care, 2010
Citations41
Relative citation ratio1.26
NIH percentile58
Molecules
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Newer medications offer more options for glycemic control in type 2 diabetes. However, they come at considerable costs. We undertook a health economic analysis to better understand the value of adding two newer medications (exenatide and sitagliptin) as second-line therapy to glycemic control strategies for patients with new-onset diabetes. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: We performed a cost-effectiveness analysis for the U.S. population aged 25-64. A lifetime analytic horizon and health care system perspective were used. Costs and quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) were discounted at 3% annually, and costs are presented in 2008 U.S. dollars. We compared three glycemic control strategies: 1) glyburide as a second-line agent, 2) exenatide as a second-line agent, and 3) sitagliptin as a second-line agent. Outcome measures included QALYs gained, incremental costs, and the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio associated with each strategy. RESULTS: Exenatide and sitagliptin conferred 0.09 and 0.12 additional QALYs, respectively, relative to glyburide as second-line therapy. In base case analysis, exenatide was dominated (cost more and provided fewer QALYs than the next most expensive option), and sitagliptin was associated with an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of 169,572 dollars per QALY saved. Results were sensitive to assumptions regarding medication costs, side effect duration, and side effect-associated disutilities. CONCLUSIONS: Exenatide and sitagliptin may confer substantial costs to health care systems. Demonstrated gains in quality and/or quantity of life are necessary for these agents to provide economic value to patients and health care systems.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 20056950 ↗