A Valuation of Infusion Therapy to Preserve Islet Function in Type 1 Diabetes

Abstract

Objectives

Recent advances in monoclonal antibody therapies offer the prospect of the prevention or amelioration of type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM). The present study was designed to capture UK (English and Scottish) preference weights for the process of undergoing infusion therapy and the likely outcomes of treatment for children (8–12 years), adolescents (13–17 years), and adults.

Methods

Vignette descriptions of T1DM health states (describing infusion therapy and reduced insulin need) were constructed based on qualitative interviews with people with type 1 diabetes, clinicians and findings from a literature review. Utilities were elicited for each health state using the standard gamble interview from the general public, adults with diabetes, and parents of children with diabetes. Participants also completed other outcome measures—EQ-5D, Pediatric Quality-of-Life Inventory, and Hyperglycemic Fear Survey. Mixed model analyseswere used to estimate the influence on utility of different participant characteristics.

Results

Self-report questionnaires indicated the nature and degree of impact of T1DM on adults', adolescents', and children's quality of life, with adolescents reporting the lowest health-related quality-of-life profile of all groups. The mixed model analysis indicated that each health state was a significant predictor of utility and the T1DM participants gave significantly higher utilities compared with the general public (P = 0.02).

Conclusion

The general public and people with diabetes (or parents of children with diabetes) all place significant value on reducing the need for insulin injections; also, all recognize the disutility of undergoing infusion cycles. These values are suitable for supporting estimates of cost-effectiveness of infusion therapies in T1DM.

Authors

Andrew Lloyd Paul Swinburn Kristina S. Boye Bradley Curtis Eric Sarpong Kim Goldsmith Bruce Bode Stephen Aronoff

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