我们即将找到治疗 1 型糖尿病的突破性方法,但谁是 200 万美国患者?

IF 2.3 Q2 ECONOMICS
Journal of Health Economics and Outcomes Research Pub Date : 2024-11-12 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.36469/001c.124604
Rebecca Smith, Samara Eisenberg, Aaron Turner-Pfifer, Jacqueline LeGrand, Sarah Pincus, Yousra Omer, Fei Wang, Bruce Pyenson
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:两百万美国人患有 1 型糖尿病(T1DM)。创新疗法规范了胰岛素给药方式,改善了患者的治疗效果,但患者能否获得这些技术取决于健康的社会决定因素,包括保险范围、正确诊断和适当的患者支持。之前对美国患病率、发病率和患者特征的估计依赖于特定地区和较低年龄段的数据,忽略了重要的决定因素。研究目标:本研究试图利用具有全国代表性的大型医疗索赔数据集来全面估算当前美国 T1DM 患者的规模,并调查患病率和发病率、患者人口统计学、保险覆盖率和设备使用方面的地域差异。这项工作还旨在预测未来 10 年 T1DM 患者的增长情况。方法:我们利用来自 4 个来源的行政索赔来确定美国 T1DM 患者的患病率和发病率,以及患者群体的各种人口和保险特征。我们将这些数据与国家人口增长预测和文献信息相结合,构建了一个精算模型,根据当前趋势和 2024 年、2029 年和 2033 年的情景预测 T1DM 人口的增长。结果:我们估计,在 2024 基准模型年,全国所有保险范围内的 T1DM 患者将达到 207 万人:179万成人(≥20岁)和28万儿童。这意味着美国的 T1DM 患病率为每 10 万人中有 617 人,发病率为 0.016%。我们预计,到 2033 年,美国 T1DM 患者人数将增长约 10%,达到约 229 万人。讨论我们的研究结果表明,T1DM 的患病率和发病率在不同地区、付款人和种族群体之间存在重大差异。这表明,基于更集中的地理数据进行的研究可能会遗漏不同地区患病率和发病率的重要差异。它还表明,T1DM 的患病率往往因收入而异,这与多项国际研究结果一致。结论对 T1DM 人口增长的准确预测对于确保适当的医疗保险和治疗报销至关重要。我们的工作通过对 2024 年、2029 年和 2033 年 T1DM 患者的人口统计和保险覆盖率的预测,为未来的政策和研究工作提供了支持。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
We Are on the Verge of Breakthrough Cures for Type 1 Diabetes, but Who Are the 2 Million Americans Who Have It?

Background: Two million Americans have type 1 diabetes (T1DM). Innovative treatments have standardized insulin delivery and improved outcomes for patients, but patients' access to such technologies depends on social determinants of health, including insurance coverage, proper diagnosis, and appropriate patient supports. Prior estimates of US prevalence, incidence, and patient characteristics have relied on data from select regions and younger ages and miss important determinants. Objectives: This study sought to use large, nationally representative healthcare claims data sets to holistically estimate the size of the current US population with T1DM and investigate geographic nuances in prevalence and incidence, patient demographics, insurance coverage, and device use. This work also aimed to project T1DM population growth over the next 10 years. Methods: We used administrative claims from 4 sources to identify prevalent and incident T1DM patients in the US, as well as various demographic and insurance characteristics of the patient population. We combined this data with information from national population growth projections and literature to construct an actuarial model to project growth of the T1DM population based on current trends and scenarios for 2024, 2029, and 2033. Results: We estimated 2.07 million T1DM patients nationally across all insurance coverages in our 2024 baseline model year: 1.79 million adults (≥20 years) and 0.28 million children. This represents a US T1DM prevalence rate of 617 per 100 000 and an incidence rate of 0.016%. By 2033, we project the US population with T1DM will grow by about 10%, reaching approximately 2.29 million patients. Discussion: Our results showed important differences in T1DM prevalence and incidence across regions, payers, and ethnic groups. This suggests studies based on more geographically concentrated data may miss important variation in prevalence and incidence across regions. It also indicates T1DM prevalence tends to vary by income, consistent with several international studies. Conclusions: Accurate projections of T1DM population growth are critical to ensure appropriate healthcare coverage and reimbursement for treatments. Our work supports future policy and research efforts with 2024, 2029, and 2033 projections of demographics and insurance coverage for people with T1DM.

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