胰岛素和胰岛素生物仿制药治疗的真实世界证据-改善依从性,结果和成本效益的机会。

IF 5.4 2区 医学 Q1 ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM
Aimin Yang, Jiazhou Yu, Johnny T K Cheung, Juliana C N Chan, Elaine Chow
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引用次数: 0

摘要

胰岛素已经被发现了一个多世纪;然而,由于与可及性、护理质量和费用有关的障碍,它对糖尿病患者的益处尚未充分实现。胰岛素治疗仍然是糖尿病管理的基石。糖尿病及其亚型的多病因性要求全面的表型分析和生物标志物的使用,以确保及时使用胰岛素实现早期血糖控制,从而获得长期益处。生物仿制胰岛素是一种与原胰岛素非常相似的生物制品,在安全性或有效性上没有显著差异。研究和开发所需的较低投资成本使生物类似胰岛素更容易负担得起,以改善获取。虽然胰岛素产品的疗效是在对照环境中得到证明的,但来自真实世界数据(RWD)的真实世界证据(RWE)在评估不同胰岛素产品(包括生物仿制药)对临床结果的安全性、有效性、成本效益、依从性和影响方面起着至关重要的作用。在这篇叙述性的综述中,我们总结了在不同地区的现实世界实践中胰岛素使用的趋势和生物类似药胰岛素使用的模式。我们回顾了生物类似药胰岛素的临床安全性、有效性和成本效益,以及胰岛素治疗的惰性和不依从性。我们还强调了胰岛素依从性的障碍和持久性的促进因素,以及促进胰岛素使用的潜在解决方案和优化不同亚型糖尿病血糖控制的技术。在我们广泛的文献回顾中,我们发现了在现实世界实践中使用生物类似胰岛素的数据缺口。我们提倡实施一种专门设计的糖尿病登记册,由训练有素的医生-护士团队管理,并提供系统支持,以产生RWE。通过建立具有结构化数据收集的登记册,我们可以生成高质量的数据,用于与电子健康记录(EHR)和健康声明进行综合分析,以评估胰岛素产品和其他糖尿病方案对临床结果、生活质量和医疗保健成本的影响,从而为实践和政策提供信息。摘要:糖尿病影响全球约10.5%的人口,胰岛素是糖尿病管理的重要治疗手段。胰岛素是在一个多世纪前被发现的,尽管由于与获取、护理质量和成本有关的障碍,它对糖尿病患者的益处尚未充分实现。来自真实世界数据的真实世界证据在评估不同胰岛素产品(包括生物仿制药)的安全性、有效性、成本效益、依从性以及对临床结果的影响方面发挥着至关重要的作用。在这篇文章中,作者对生物类似胰岛素的使用模式和成本效益进行了详细的回顾,并指出了主要的数据缺口。作者解释了基于来自登记册、电子健康记录和健康声明等来源的真实数据生成真实证据的方法、效用和局限性,以评估治疗有效性和安全性。作者建议实施一种专门建立的糖尿病登记册,它具有结构化的数据收集,由训练有素的医生-护士团队在系统支持下进行管理。这些高质量的数据可以与电子健康记录和健康声明相结合,以评估干预措施,包括胰岛素对结果、生活质量和成本的影响,从而为实践和政策提供信息。基于这些前提和现有数据,作者总结了胰岛素使用的趋势,包括生物类似药胰岛素,并回顾了这些产品的安全性、有效性和成本效益的真实证据。他们还发现了治疗惰性和不依从性等障碍,讨论了持续治疗的促成因素,并提出了评估胰岛素产品和其他糖尿病项目对临床结果、生活质量和医疗成本的影响的解决方案,以告知实践和政策。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Real world evidence of insulin and biosimilar insulin therapy-Opportunities to improve adherence, outcomes and cost-effectiveness.

Insulin has been discovered for more than a century; however, its benefits to people with diabetes are yet to be fully realized due to barriers related to access, quality of care and costs. Insulin therapy remains the cornerstone of diabetes management. The multicausality of diabetes and its subtypes calls for comprehensive phenotyping and use of biomarkers to ensure timely use of insulin to achieve early glycaemic control for long-term benefits. Biosimilar insulins are biologic products that closely resemble originator insulins without significant differences in safety or efficacy. The lower investment costs needed for research and development make biosimilar insulin more affordable to improve access. While the efficacy of insulin products is proven in controlled settings, real world evidence (RWE) from real world data (RWD) plays a crucial role in assessing the safety, efficacy, cost-effectiveness, adherence to and impacts of different insulin products, including biosimilars, on clinical outcomes. In this narrative review, we summarized the trends of insulin use and patterns of biosimilar insulin utilization in real world practice across different regions. We reviewed RWE on clinical safety, efficacy and cost-effectiveness of biosimilar insulin, as well as therapeutic inertia and non-adherence with insulin therapy. We also highlighted barriers to insulin adherence and enablers for persistence, along with potential solutions to promote the use of insulin and technologies for optimizing glycaemic control in different subtypes of diabetes. During our extensive literature review, we identified data gaps in the usage of biosimilar insulin in real world practice. We advocate for implementing a diabetes register designed fit-for-purpose, managed by a trained doctor-nurse team with system support, to generate RWE. By setting up registers with structured data collection, we can generate high quality data for integrative analysis with electronic health records (EHR) and health claims to evaluate the impacts of insulin products and other diabetes programmes on clinical outcomes, quality of life and healthcare costs to inform practice and policies. PLAIN LANGUAGE SUMMARY: Diabetes affects approximately 10.5% of the global population and insulin is a vital treatment for diabetes management. Insulin was discovered more than a century ago, although its benefits to people with diabetes are yet to be fully realized due to barriers related to access, quality of care, and costs. Real-world evidence from real-world data plays a crucial role in assessing the safety, efficacy, cost-effectiveness, adherence to, and impacts of different insulin products, including biosimilars, on clinical outcomes. In this publication, the authors provided a detailed review of the patterns of use and cost-effectiveness of biosimilar insulin, and identified major data gaps. The authors explained the methodology, utility, and limitations of generating real-world evidence based on real-world data from sources such as registers, electronic health records and health claims for assessing treatment effectiveness and safety. The authors proposed the implementation of a purpose-built diabetes register with structured data collection, managed by a trained doctor-nurse team with system support. These high-quality data can be integrated with electronic health records and health claims for evaluation of interventions, including insulin on outcomes, quality of life, and costs to inform practice and policy. Based on these premises and available data, the authors summarized trends in insulin use including biosimilar insulin, and reviewed real-world evidence on the safety, efficacy, and cost-effectiveness of these products. They also identified barriers like therapeutic inertia and non-adherence, discussed enablers for persistence, and proposed solutions to evaluate the impacts of insulin products and other diabetes programs on clinical outcomes, quality of life, and healthcare costs to inform practice and policies.

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来源期刊
Diabetes, Obesity & Metabolism
Diabetes, Obesity & Metabolism 医学-内分泌学与代谢
CiteScore
10.90
自引率
6.90%
发文量
319
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism is primarily a journal of clinical and experimental pharmacology and therapeutics covering the interrelated areas of diabetes, obesity and metabolism. The journal prioritises high-quality original research that reports on the effects of new or existing therapies, including dietary, exercise and lifestyle (non-pharmacological) interventions, in any aspect of metabolic and endocrine disease, either in humans or animal and cellular systems. ‘Metabolism’ may relate to lipids, bone and drug metabolism, or broader aspects of endocrine dysfunction. Preclinical pharmacology, pharmacokinetic studies, meta-analyses and those addressing drug safety and tolerability are also highly suitable for publication in this journal. Original research may be published as a main paper or as a research letter.
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