2008
DOI: 10.1007/s12325-008-0080-4
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Cost-effectiveness of switching to biphasic insulin aspart in poorly-controlled type 2 diabetes patients in China

Abstract: BIAsp30 was projected to substantially improve clinical outcomes but was associated with increased lifetime medical costs. BIAsp30 would be considered cost-effective in China given a willingness-to-pay threshold of CNY 100,000 per QALY gained in type 2 diabetes patients poorly controlled on BHI.

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Cited by 33 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…The management costs and DM-related complications costs were referred to the results of the survey conducted by the IMS Health in six tertiary and three secondary hospitals in China [21]. Complication costs refer to medical expenditure that resulted from diabetes-related complications.…”
Section: Costs and Perspectivementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The management costs and DM-related complications costs were referred to the results of the survey conducted by the IMS Health in six tertiary and three secondary hospitals in China [21]. Complication costs refer to medical expenditure that resulted from diabetes-related complications.…”
Section: Costs and Perspectivementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Costs for vascular events included fatal and non-fatal costs (applied in the year when the event occurred) and maintenance costs (applied in subsequent years if patients survived or simulation horizon was not reached); and the costs were primarily based on a published Chinese study [67]. As the costs of ulcers were not available, they were derived by synthesizing data from other published studies [68][69] (Table 4).…”
Section: Costsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…a Costs for vascular events were primarily based on a published Chinese study [67]. Costs of ulcer were derived by synthesizing data from other published studies [68][69]. Costs for severe hypoglycemia [70], urinary tract infection and genital infection [71] were taken from published studies.…”
Section: Costsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For those surviving the event, maintenance costs were applied in all subsequent years until patient death or the simulation ends. The costs were estimated based largely on Gao et al [52]; when the direct cost of a diabetes-related complication (eg, ulcer) was unavailable, we used data from the hospital survey and other published studies [53][54] (Table 4).…”
Section: Costsmentioning
confidence: 99%