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Cost-effectiveness analysis of exenatide twice daily (BID) vs insulin glargine once daily (QD) as add-on therapy in Chinese patients with Type 2 diabetes mellitus inadequately controlled by oral therapies.

J Med Econ · 2015

Last updated 2026-05-28

A study compared the cost-effectiveness of exenatide taken twice daily versus insulin glargine taken once daily as an additional treatment for Chinese adults with type 2 diabetes not well controlled by oral medications. Over 40 years, patients on exenatide gained 1.88 quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) while saving Chinese Renminbi (RMB) 114,593 compared to those on insulin glargine, which translates to a cost saving of RMB 61,078 per QALY gained.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalJ Med Econ, 2015
Citations19
Relative citation ratio0.87
NIH percentile46
Molecules exenatide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To estimate cost-effectiveness of exenatide twice daily (BID) vs insulin glargine once daily (QD) as add-on therapy in Chinese type 2 diabetes patients not well controlled by oral anti-diabetic (OAD) agents. METHODS: The Cardiff model was populated with data synthesized from three head-to-head randomized clinical trials of up to 30 weeks in China comparing exenatide BID vs insulin glargine as add-on therapies to oral therapies in the Chinese population. The Cardiff model generated outputs including macrovascular and microvascular complications, diabetes-specific mortality, costs, and quality-adjusted life years (QALYs). Cost and QALYs were estimated with a time horizon of 40 years at a discount rate of 3% from a societal perspective. RESULTS: Compared with insulin glargine plus OAD treatments, patients on exenatide BID plus OAD gained 1.88 QALYs, at an incremental cost saving of Chinese Renminbi (RMB) 114,593 (i.e., cost saving of RMB 61078/QALY). The cost-effectiveness results were robust to various sensitivity analyses including probabilistic sensitivity analysis. The variables with the most impact on incremental cost-effectiveness ratio included HbA1c level at baseline, health utilities decrement, and BMI at baseline. CONCLUSIONS: Compared with insulin glargine QD, exenatide BID as add-on therapy to OAD is a cost-effective treatment in Chinese patients inadequately controlled by OAD treatments.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 26134916 ↗

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