Evaluating the Economic Burden of Therapeutic Inertia in People With Type 2 Diabetes in Saudi Arabia

Speaker(s)

Alluhidan M1, Alturaiki A2, Alabdulkarim H2, Alhossan A3, Al Jedai A4
1Saudi Health Council, Riyadh, 01, Saudi Arabia, 2King Abdulaziz Medical City - National Guard Health Affairs, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, 3King Saud University Medical City, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, 4Ministry of Health, Riyadh, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia

OBJECTIVES: Therapeutic inertia in type 2 diabetes, defined as a failure to intensify treatment despite poor glycemic control, can arise due to a variety of factors, despite evidence linking improved glycemic control with reductions in diabetes-related complications. The present study aims to evaluate the health and economic burden of therapeutic inertia in people with type 2 diabetes in Saudi Arabia.

METHODS: The IQVIA Core Diabetes Model (v9.0) was used to evaluate outcomes. Baseline cohort characteristics were sourced from Saudi-specific data, with baseline glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) at 8.0%, 9.0%, and 10.0%. Modeled subjects were brought to an HbA1c target of 7.0% immediately or after delays of 1–5 years across time horizons of 3–50 years. Outcomes were discounted annually at 3.0%. Costs were accounted from a societal perspective and expressed in 2023 Saudi Arabian Riyals (SAR).

RESULTS: Immediate glycemic control was associated with improved or equal life expectancy and quality-adjusted life expectancy, and cost savings in all scenarios were compared with delays in achieving target HbA1c. Combined cost savings ranged from SAR 411 (EUR 102) per person with a baseline HbA1c of 8.0% versus a 1-year delay over a 3-year time horizon, to SAR 21,422 (EUR 5,291) per person with a baseline HbA1c of 10.0% versus a 5-year delay over a 50-year time horizon. Discounted life expectancy and quality-adjusted life expectancy were projected to improve by up to 0.4 years and 0.5 quality-adjusted life years (QALY), respectively, with immediate glycemic control.

CONCLUSIONS: Therapeutic inertia was associated with a substantial health and economic burden in Saudi Arabia. Interventions and initiatives that can help to reduce therapeutic inertia are likely to improve health outcomes and reduce healthcare expenditure.

Code

EE294

Topic

Clinical Outcomes, Economic Evaluation, Patient-Centered Research

Topic Subcategory

Adherence, Persistence, & Compliance, Clinical Outcomes Assessment, Thresholds & Opportunity Cost

Disease

Diabetes/Endocrine/Metabolic Disorders (including obesity)