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 2026-05-28In 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.
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| Journal | BMJ Open Diabetes Res Care, 2019 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 16 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.76 |
| NIH percentile | 41 |
| 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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