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Evaluation of the long-term cost-effectiveness of liraglutide therapy for patients with type 2 diabetes in France.

J Med Econ · 2016

Last updated 2026-05-28

A study in France compared the long-term effects and costs of liraglutide, sitagliptin, and glimepiride for people with type 2 diabetes whose blood sugar control was not adequate with metformin alone. Over a lifetime, liraglutide improved quality-adjusted life expectancy by about 0.25 years compared to sitagliptin and by 0.23 years compared to glimepiride, but it also increased healthcare costs by €2,558 and €4,695 per patient, respectively. The cost per additional year of good-quality life gained was €10,275 versus sitagliptin and €20,709 versus glimepiride, both below France’s threshold of €30,000.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalJ Med Econ, 2016
Citations17
Relative citation ratio0.91
NIH percentile47
Molecules liraglutide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The present study aimed to compare the projected long-term clinical and cost implications associated with liraglutide, sitagliptin and glimepiride in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus failing to achieve glycemic control on metformin monotherapy in France. METHODS: Clinical input data for the modeling analysis were taken from two randomized, controlled trials (LIRA-DPP4 and LEAD-2). Long-term (patient lifetime) projections of clinical outcomes and direct costs (2013 Euros; €) were made using a validated computer simulation model of type 2 diabetes. Costs were taken from published France-specific sources. Future costs and clinical benefits were discounted at 3% annually. Sensitivity analyses were performed. RESULTS: Liraglutide was associated with an increase in quality-adjusted life expectancy of 0.25 quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) and an increase in mean direct healthcare costs of €2558 per patient compared with sitagliptin. In the comparison with glimepiride, liraglutide was associated with an increase in quality-adjusted life expectancy of 0.23 QALYs and an increase in direct costs of €4695. Based on these estimates, liraglutide was associated with an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) of €10,275 per QALY gained vs sitagliptin and €20,709 per QALY gained vs glimepiride in France. CONCLUSION: Calculated ICERs for both comparisons fell below the commonly quoted willingness-to-pay threshold of €30,000 per QALY gained. Therefore, liraglutide is likely to be cost-effective vs sitagliptin and glimepiride from a healthcare payer perspective in France.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 26413789 ↗

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