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Clinical and economic outcomes among injection-naïve patients with type 2 diabetes initiating dulaglutide compared with basal insulin in a US real-world setting: the DISPEL Study.

BMJ Open Diabetes Res Care · 2019

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a real-world study of 903 matched patients with type 2 diabetes, those starting dulaglutide saw a greater reduction in blood sugar control (HbA1c) after one year compared to those starting basal insulin (-1.12% vs -0.51%). While total diabetes-related costs were similar between the two groups ($13,562 vs $13,779), the cost per unit of blood sugar improvement was lower for dulaglutide.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalBMJ Open Diabetes Res Care, 2019
Citations16
Relative citation ratio0.76
NIH percentile41
Molecules dulaglutide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

AIMS: To report 1-year clinical and economic outcomes from the retrospective DISPEL (Dulaglutide vs Basal InSulin in Injection Naïve Patients with Type 2 Diabetes: Effectiveness in ReaL World) Study. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This observational claims study included patients with type 2 diabetes (T2D) and ≥1 claim for dulaglutide or basal insulin between November 2014 and April 2017 (index date=earliest fill date). Propensity score matching was used to address treatment selection bias. Change from baseline in hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) was compared between the matched cohorts using analysis of covariance; diabetes-related costs were analyzed using generalized linear models. RESULTS: Matched cohorts (903 pairs total; 523 pairs with complete cost data) were balanced in baseline characteristics with mean HbA1c 8.6%, mean age 54 years. At 1 year postindex, dulaglutide patients had significantly greater reduction in HbA1c than basal insulin (-1.12% vs -0.51%, p<0.01), lower medical costs ($3753 vs $7604, p<0.01), higher pharmacy costs ($9809 vs $6175, p<0.01), and similar total costs ($13 562 vs $13 779, p=0.76). Medical and total costs per 1% HbA1c reduction were lower for dulaglutide than basal insulin (medical: $3128 vs $12 673, p<0.01; total: $11 302 vs $22 965, p<0.01), while pharmacy costs per 1% HbA1c reduction were lower without reaching statistical significance ($8174 vs $10 292, p=0.15). CONCLUSIONS: In this real-world study, patients with T2D initiating dulaglutide demonstrated greater HbA1c reduction compared with those initiating basal insulin. Although total diabetes-related costs were similar, the total diabetes-related costs per HbA1c reduction were lower for dulaglutide, highlighting the importance of evaluating effectiveness along with the economic impact of medications.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 31875137 ↗

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