Willingness to pay for diabetes drug therapy in type 2 diabetes patients: based on LEAD clinical programme results.
J Med Econ · 2012
Last updated 2026-05-28In a study of 3,967 people with type 2 diabetes, participants were willing to pay an extra €2.64 per day for liraglutide compared to rosiglitazone, €1.94 more than glimepiride, €3.36 more than insulin glargine, and €0.81 more than exenatide. The main reasons for preferring liraglutide were its ability to help with weight loss compared to rosiglitazone, glimepiride, and insulin glargine, and its once-daily administration compared to exenatide, which required twice-daily injections.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | J Med Econ, 2012 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 21 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.72 |
| NIH percentile | 39 |
| Molecules | — |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes |
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to investigate the preferences of people with diabetes for liraglutide vs other glucose lowering drugs, based on outcomes of clinical trials.
METHODS: Willingness to pay (WTP) for diabetes drug treatment was assessed by combining results from a recent WTP study with analysis of results from the Liraglutide Effect and Action in Diabetes (LEAD) programme. The LEAD programme included six randomised clinical trials with 3967 participants analysing efficacy and safety of liraglutide 1.2 mg (LEAD 1-6 trials), rosiglitazone (LEAD 1 trial), glimepiride (LEAD 2-3 trials), insulin glargine (LEAD 5 trial), and exenatide (LEAD 6 trial). The WTP survey used discrete choice experimental (DCE) methodology to evaluate the convenience and clinical effects of glucose lowering treatments.
RESULTS: People with type 2 diabetes were prepared to pay an extra €2.64/day for liraglutide compared with rosiglitazone, an extra €1.94/day compared with glimepiride, an extra €3.36/day compared with insulin glargine, and an extra €0.81/day compared with exenatide. Weight loss was the largest component of WTP for liraglutide compared with rosiglitazone, glimepiride, and insulin glargine. Differences in the administration of the two drugs was the largest component of WTP for liraglutide (once daily anytime) compared with exenatide (twice daily with meals). A limitation of the study was that it was based on six clinical trials where liraglutide was the test drug, but each trial had a different comparator, therefore the clinical effects of liraglutide were much better documented than the comparators.
CONCLUSIONS: WTP analyses of the clinical results from the LEAD programme suggested that participants with type 2 diabetes were willing to pay appreciably more for liraglutide than other glucose lowering treatments. This was driven by the relative advantage of weight loss compared with rosiglitazone, glimepiride, and insulin glargine, and administration frequency compared with exenatide.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 22853443 ↗