The cost-effectiveness of diabetes prevention: results from the Diabetes Prevention Program and the Diabetes Prevention Program Outcomes Study

Publication Description
BACKGROUND: The Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP) was a randomized, controlled clinical trial. It demonstrated that among high-risk individuals with impaired glucose tolerance, diabetes incidence was reduced by 58 % with lifestyle intervention and 31 % with metformin compared to placebo. During the Diabetes Prevention Program Outcomes Study (DPPOS), all DPP participants were unmasked to their treatment assignments, the original lifestyle intervention group was offered additional lifestyle support, the metformin group continued metformin, and all three groups were offered a group-implemented lifestyle intervention. Over the 10 years of combined DPP/DPPOS follow-up, diabetes incidence was reduced by 34 % in the lifestyle group and 18 % in the metformin group compared to placebo. The purpose of this article is to review and synthesize analyses published by the DPP/DPPOS Research Group that have described the cost-effectiveness of diabetes prevention. METHODS: We describe the resource utilization and costs of the DPP and DPPOS interventions, the costs of non-intervention-related medical care, the impact of the interventions on diabetes progression and quality-of-life, and the cost-effectiveness of the interventions from health system and societal perspectives. Cost-effectiveness analyses were performed with a 3-year time horizon using DPP data, a lifetime time horizon that simulated 3-year DPP data, and a 10-year time horizon using combined DPP/DPPOS data. RESULTS: Although more expensive than the placebo intervention, the greater costs of the lifestyle and metformin interventions were offset by reductions in the costs of nonintervention-related medical care. Every year after randomization, quality-of-life was better for participants in the lifestyle intervention compared to those in the metformin or placebo intervention. In both the simulated lifetime analysis and the 10-year within trial economic analysis, lifestyle and metformin were extremely cost-effective (that is, improved outcomes at a low incremental cost) or even cost-saving (that is, improved outcomes and reduced total costs) compared to the placebo intervention. CONCLUSIONS: The implementation of diabetes prevention programs in high-risk individuals will result in important health benefits and represents a good value for money. TRIAL REGISTRATION: NCT00004992 (DPP) and NCT00038727 (DPPOS).

Primary Author
Herman,W. H.

Author Address
Diabetes Prevention Program Coordinating Center, The Biostatistics Center, George Washington University, 16110 Executive Blvd., Suite 750, Rockville, MD 20852 USA.

Volume
1

Start Page
9

Other Pages
1. eCollection 2015

Author Address
Diabetes Prevention Program Coordinating Center, The Biostatistics Center, George Washington University, 16110 Executive Blvd., Suite 750, Rockville, MD 20852 USA.

PMID
28702228

PMCID
PMC5471886



Reference Type
Journal Article

Periodical Full
Clinical diabetes and endocrinology

Publication Year
2015

Publication Date
2-Sep

Place of Publication
England

ISSN/ISBN
2055-8260

Document Object Index
10.1186/s40842-015-0009-1 [doi]

Accession Number
PMID: 28702228