The pattern of prescribing of glucose modulating agents for type 2 diabetes in general practices in England 2016/17.
Int J Clin Pract · 2018
Last updated 2026-05-28In 2016/17, England spent £983.7 million on diabetes medications, with anti-diabetes drugs making up 45.1% of the total cost and 72.0% of prescription items. The yearly cost per patient for single-drug treatments ranged from £11 for gliclazide and glimepiride to £885 for liraglutide. Use of SGLT-2i drugs grew by 70% annually, appearing in 95% of GP practices, while liraglutide accounted for 11% of total spending despite being used by only 1.3% of patients.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Int J Clin Pract, 2018 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 8 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.30 |
| NIH percentile | 18 |
| Molecules | — |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In the financial year 2016/17 there were 52.0 million items prescribed for diabetes at a total net ingredient cost of £983.7 million - up from 28.9 million prescription items and £572.4 million in 2006/07. Anti-diabetes drugs (British National Formulary section 6.1.2) make up 45.1 per cent of the total £983.7 million net ingredient cost of drugs used in diabetes and account for 72.0 per cent of prescription items for all diabetes prescribing.
METHODS: We examined the way that agents licensed to treat type 2 diabetes were used across GP practices in England in the year 2016/2017. Analysis was at a GP practice level not at the level of patient data.
RESULTS: Annual prescribing costs / patient / medication type for monotherapy varied considerable from £11/year for gliclazide and glimepiride to £885/year for Liraglutide. The use of SGLT-2i agents grew strongly at 70% per annum to around 100,000 DDD with prescriptions seen in 95% of GP practices. Liraglutide expenditure (11% of total) was high for a relatively small number of patients (1.3% of Defined Daily Doses), with still significant spend on exenatide. Liraglutide use significantly exceeded that of other glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) agonists.
CONCLUSIONS: Our work demonstrates the significant cost of medication to modulate tissue glucose levels in type 2 diabetes and the dominance of some non-generic preparations in terms of number of prescriptions and overall spend. There are some older sulphonylureas in use, which should not generally be prescribed. Regular audit of patient treatment at a general practice level will ensure appropriate targeted use of licensed medications and of their cost effectiveness.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 29537664 ↗