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Large study shows potential cost savings for early detection and treatment of type 2 diabetes

A large study from Aarhus University showed that for individuals diagnosed with diabetes, screening is associated with a reduction in healthcare costs due to fewer admissions and doctor’s visits and a reduction in prescribed medication. These results have just been published in the scientific journal Diabetologia.

2018.04.12 | Henriette Stevnhøj

A large study from Aarhus University showed that for individuals diagnosed with diabetes, screening is associated with a reduction in healthcare costs due to fewer admissions and doctor’s visits and a reduction in prescribed medication.

A large study from Aarhus University showed that for individuals diagnosed with diabetes, screening is associated with a reduction in healthcare costs due to fewer admissions and doctor’s visits and a reduction in prescribed medication.

Health checks including diabetes risk assessment have been introduced in a number of countries. However, there are few population-based trials assessing the benefits, harms and costs of these screening programmes, and these have shown mixed results.

Between 2001 and 2006, a population-based cardiovascular and diabetes screening programme was introduced in five out of sixteen Danish counties. Over 150,000 individuals registered with 181 practices participating in the ADDITION-Denmark study were sent a diabetes risk score questionnaire, and if their score indicated moderate to high risk they were invited to attend for a diabetes test and cardiovascular risk assessment with their family doctor.

More than 27,000 attended for screening, and 1533 were diagnosed with diabetes during screening. A further 1,760,000 individuals were identified for a matched no-screening control group. Participants were followed for approximately six years following diagnosis until 31 December 2012, when national registers were searched for healthcare usage and healthcare cost.

The researchers found that those individuals with clinically-diagnosed diabetes were identified on average 2.2 years later than individuals whose diabetes was detected in the screening practices. Healthcare costs were significantly lower in the screening group compared with the no-screening control group, with an average annual difference in healthcare costs of €889 per individual with diabetes.

Lead author, Camilla Sortsø, says “While trials of population-based screening for type 2 diabetes have not demonstrated beneficial effects at the population level, we have previously shown that there are benefits for those found to have diabetes. This study contributes to our previous research by showing that early detection and treatment among individuals at high risk of type 2 diabetes has the potential to reduce costs.”

About the study:

  •  Type of study: A non-randomised register-based study. The basic data originates from the ADDITON study, while the new data has been collected from the Danish Diabetes Database and the National Patient Register.
  • Partners: Applied Economics and Health Research, Copenhagen, University of Cambridge School of Clinical Medicine, the Danish Diabetes Academy, Odense University Hospital, University of Southern Denmark.
  • Funding: The specific study is supported by the Danish Diabetes Association. Between 2001-2010, ADDITION received financial support from public foundations (85%) and from the pharmaceutical industry (15%): Novo Nordisk AS, Novo Nordisk Scandinavia AB, ASTRA Denmark, Pfizer Denmark, GlaxoSmithKline Pharma Denmark, SERVIER Denmark A/S and HemoCue Denmark A/S.
  • Link to the scientific article: https://www.springermedizin.de/effect-of-screening-for-type-2-diabetes-on-healthcare-costs-a-re/15542004?fulltextView=true

Contact:

Professor, DMSc Torsten Lauritzen
Department of Public Health, Aarhus University
Mobile: (+45) 2043 6931
Email: tl@ph.au.dk

Doctor Rebecca Simmons
University of Cambridge
Telephone: +44(0)1223-761556
rks34@medschl.cam.ac.uk

About the ADDITION study

The published results are based on the Danish part of the ADDITION study. The ADDITION study is a Danish initiated, international study with partners in Cambridge, UK and Utrecht, Holland. The study was begun in the year 2000 as a randomised study with the participation of general practitioners from 181 practices in Denmark. All of the general practitioners were trained in systematic early detection of diabetes.

The majority of the general practitioners sent a risk-questionnaire to all patients aged 40-69, while a smaller group of general practitioners handed-out the questionnaire to their patients or handed it out when they visited the doctor for reasons other than diabetes. In addition, half of the doctors were trained to give intensive treatment consisting of lifestyle changes (healthy diet, exercise, smoking stop) and preventive medicine that e.g. lowers blood sugar levels, blood pressure and cholesterol in the blood. The other half of the general practitioners treated patients in accordance with the existing treatment guidelines.

The randomised study showed a 17 per cent decrease in cardiovascular disease after five years. A relevant but not statistically significant difference. Morbidity and mortality in the group that was treated in accordance with the existing treatment guidelines proved to be considerably smaller than among patients who were given the diabetes diagnosis without systematic screening.

Torsten Lauritzen, Aarhus University and guarantor for the present study tells: “The present paper is based on a recent publication in Diabetologia (2017) demonstrating that a single round of diabetes screening and cardiovascular risk assessment was associated with a 16% risk reduction in cardiovascular disease and a 21% reduction in all-cause mortality in individuals diagnosed with diabetes between 2001 and 2009.”

 

 

 

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