Publisher DOI: 10.2337/db18-142-LB
Title: Budget Impact Analysis of Self-Monitoring of Blood Glucose vs. Flash-Continuous Glucose Monitoring in Intensive Insulin Users with Diabetes Type 2 Covered by Medicare and Medicaid
Language: English
Authors: Stueve, Magnus 
Zöllner, York 
Issue Date: Jul-2018
Journal or Series Name: Diabetes : the journal of the American Diabetes Association 
Volume: 67
Issue: Suppl. 1
Startpage: 142
Endpage: LB
Abstract: 
Introduction: Self-Monitoring of Blood Glucose (SMBG) uses capillary blood glucose to measure glycemia in diabetic patients. Recently FDA-approved Flash Continuous Glucose Monitoring (F-CGM) reveals glucose levels when scanned by the reading device. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) have announced to reimburse F-CGM at the same level as CGM devices.

Aim: This analysis’ objective was to quantify the CMS budget impact (BI) of F-CGM reimbursement in patients with type 2 diabetes (T2DM) on intensified insulin therapy (IIT), and compare it to the BI of conventional SMBG via cost-related break-even metrics. These were chosen because - in the absence of RCT-based, primary endpoint-driven clinical superiority evidence of F-CGM over SMBG for this population (REPLACE study) - they are well-suited to inform budget allocation decisions.

Methods: An economic model was developed in Excel. CMS reimbursement/patient co-insurance levels for SMBG and F-CGM were used; data on morbidity, treatment and usage patterns were sourced from the literature and official websites. Different scenarios were simulated to elicit break-even points between F-CGM and SMBG.

Results: The annual cost of SMBG with 3.7 tests per day (see REPLACE) is $180 per patient, compared to $2,156 incurred per F-CGM patient, representing a cost difference of $1,976/year or $5.41/day. This implies a budget break-even ratio of 1:12 patients (F-CGM:SMBG). Both technologies would break even at a consumption of 44 test strips per day. A year’s SMBG budget would last only 30 days if spent on F-CGM.

Conclusion: With diabetes budgets under pressure, thoughtful spending policies are needed. It is recommended to analyze in detail which T2DM subgroups will benefit most from F-CGM, focusing reimbursement to the latter. SMBG, being an established technology, represents - at current reimbursement levels - an attractive spending option to budget holders.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12738/4815
ISSN: 0012-1797
Institute: Department Gesundheitswissenschaften 
Fakultät Life Sciences 
Type: Article
Appears in Collections:Publications without full text

Show full item record

Page view(s)

37
checked on Dec 25, 2024

Google ScholarTM

Check

HAW Katalog

Check

Add Files to Item

Note about this record


Items in REPOSIT are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.