2021-04-21Zeitschriftenartikel
Excess costs of type 2 diabetes and their sociodemographic and clinical determinants: a cross-sectional study using data from the German Health Interview and Examination Survey for Adults (DEGS1)
König, Hannah
Rommel, Alexander
Baumert, Jens
Schmidt, Christian
König, Hans-Helmut
Brettschneider, Christian
Konnopka, Alexander
Objectives
The objectives of this study were to estimate
the direct and indirect excess costs of type 2 diabetes
mellitus (T2D) using data representative for the German
adult population and to investigate the association of
sociodemographic and clinical determinants with these
excess costs.
Setting
We calculated mean annual costs for
individuals with T2D and a control group without
diabetes, using data on healthcare utilisation and
productivity losses from the cross-sectional German
Health Interview and Examination Survey for Adults. We
adjusted for group differences using entropy balancing
and estimated excess costs for total, direct, indirect
costs and additional cost categories using generalised
linear models. We performed subgroup analyses to
investigate the association of sociodemographic (age,
sex and education) and clinical determinants (diabetes
duration, glycaemic index and complications) with
excess costs.
Participants
The final study sample included n=325
individuals with T2D and n=4490 individuals without
diabetes in the age between 18 and 79 years.
Results
Total excess costs amounted to €927, of which
€719 were attributable to direct and €209 to indirect
excess costs. Total costs were significantly increased
by 28% for T2D compared with controls. Group
differences in direct, outpatient and medication costs
were statistically significant. Medication costs were
88% higher for T2D and had the highest share in direct
excess costs. With respect to specific determinants,
direct excess costs ranged from €203 for 4–10 years
diabetes duration to €1405 for diabetes complications.
Indirect excess costs ranged from €−544 for >10 years
diabetes duration to €995 for high education.
Conclusions
T2D was associated with high costs,
mainly due to direct costs. As pointed out by our results,
diabetes complications and comorbidities have a large
impact on the costs, leaving medication costs as main
contributor of T2D excess costs