Healthcare resource utilization and costs assessment of type 2 diabetes patients initiating exenatide BID or glargine: a retrospective database analysis.
J Med Econ · 2011
Last updated 2026-05-28A study compared healthcare use and costs between 7,255 type 2 diabetes patients starting exenatide and 2,819 starting glargine. After matching, exenatide users had a 19% lower chance of hospital stays and $2,597 lower total medical costs, including $1,968 less in inpatient costs and $1,324 less in outpatient costs, though their prescription costs were $706 higher.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | J Med Econ, 2011 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 12 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.28 |
| NIH percentile | 18 |
| Molecules | exenatide |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes |
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To examine resource utilization and healthcare costs associated with the use of exenatide versus glargine in type 2 diabetes (T2D) patients.
METHODS: A retrospective analysis comprised of patients with T2D initiating exenatide (n = 7,255) or glargine (n = 2,819) between 04/01/2005 and 06/30/2007. Propensity score matching was used (2,506 matched pairs) to control for baseline demographic, clinical, resource use, and cost variables to balance treatment groups. Mean medical costs and other cost components were estimated using nonparametric bootstrapping.
RESULTS: Exenatide-treated patients had 19% lower likelihood of all-cause hospitalizations (odds ratio [OR]: 0.81, p = 0.009) compared to glargine-treated patients. Exenatide-treated patients had significantly lower total medical costs of $2,597 (p = 0.008). Exenatide-treated patients had significantly lower inpatient costs of $1,968 (p = 0.004) and outpatient costs of $1,324 (p = 0.011), but higher prescription costs of $706 (p < 0.001). Exenatide-treated patients further incurred lower hospitalization costs of $1,910 (p = 0.005) and physician office visit costs of $608 (p = 0.008).
KEY LIMITATIONS: Lack of availability of clinical measures including duration of diabetes, severity of T2D and lack of control for unmeasured confounding.
CONCLUSIONS: Patients initiating exenatide treatment had significantly lower healthcare resource utilization and total medical costs. Cost offsets were observed in inpatient and outpatient costs despite higher prescription costs.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 21158486 ↗
Related research
- Effects of Once-Weekly Exenatide on Cardiovascular Outcomes in Type 2 Diabetes.
- Exenatide once weekly versus placebo in Parkinson's disease: a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial.
- Efficacy and safety of exenatide once weekly versus sitagliptin or pioglitazone as an adjunct to metformin for treatment of type 2 diabetes (DURATION-2): a randomised trial.
- Efficacy and Safety of Once-Weekly Semaglutide Versus Exenatide ER in Subjects With Type 2 Diabetes (SUSTAIN 3): A 56-Week, Open-Label, Randomized Clinical Trial.
- Exenatide reduces reperfusion injury in patients with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction.
- Exenatide and the treatment of patients with Parkinson's disease.
- Use of twice-daily exenatide in Basal insulin-treated patients with type 2 diabetes: a randomized, controlled trial.
- Exenatide once weekly versus liraglutide once daily in patients with type 2 diabetes (DURATION-6): a randomised, open-label study.