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Estimating the cost effectiveness of intermittently scanned continuous glucose monitoring in adults with type 1 diabetes in England.

Abstract
OBJECTIVE: We previously showed that intermittently scanned continuous glucose monitoring (isCGM) reduces HbA1c at 24 weeks compared with self-monitoring of blood glucose with finger pricking (SMBG) in adults with type 1 diabetes and high HbA1c levels (58 to 97 mmol/mol [7.5-11%]). We aim to assess the economic impact of isCGM compared with SMBG. METHODS: Participant-level baseline and follow-up health status (EQ-5D-5L) and within-trial healthcare resource-use data were collected. Quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) were derived at 24 weeks, adjusting for baseline EQ-5D-5L. Participant-level costs were generated. Using the IQVIA CORE Diabetes Model, economic analysis was performed from the National Health Service perspective over a lifetime horizon, discounted at 3.5%. RESULTS: Within-trial EQ-5D-5L showed non-significant adjusted incremental QALY gain of 0.006 (95%CI: -0.007 to 0.019) for isCGM compared with SMBG and an adjusted cost increase of £548 (95%CI: 381 to 714) per participant. The lifetime projected incremental cost (95%CI) of isCGM was £1,954 (-5,108 to 8,904) with an incremental QALY (95%CI) gain of 0.436 (0.195 to 0.652) resulting in an incremental cost-per-QALY of £4,477. In all subgroups, isCGM had an incremental cost-per-QALY better than £20,000 compared with SMBG; for people with baseline HbA1c >75 mmol/mol (9.0%), it was cost-saving. Sensitivity analysis suggested isCGM remains cost-effective if its effectiveness lasts for at least 7 years. CONCLUSION: While isCGM is associated with increased short-term costs, compared with SMBG, its benefits in lowering HbA1c will lead to sufficient long-term health-gains and cost-savings to justify costs, so long as the effect lasts into the medium term.
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Article
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Diabetes
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Diabet Med. 2023 Sep 26:e15232. doi: 10.1111/dme.15232. Online ahead of print.
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