Background: Lifestyle interventions in patients with type-2 diabetes contribute to reducing the incidence of chronic kidney disease. The cost-effectiveness of lifestyle interventions to prevent kidney disease in patients with type-2 diabetes remains undetermined. We aimed to develop a Markov model from a Japanese healthcare payer's perspective focusing on the development of kidney disease in patients with type-2 diabetes and examine the cost-effectiveness of lifestyle interventions.
Methods: To develop the model, the parameters, including lifestyle intervention effect, were derived from results of the Look AHEAD trial and previously published literature. Incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICER) were calculated from the difference in cost and quality-adjusted life years (QALY) between lifestyle intervention and diabetes support education groups. We estimated lifetime costs and effectiveness assuming patient's life span to be 100 years. Costs and effectiveness were discounted by 2% annually.
Results: ICER for lifestyle intervention compared to diabetes support education was JPY 1,510,838 (USD 13,031) per QALY. Cost-effectiveness acceptability curve showed that the probability that lifestyle intervention is cost-effective at the threshold of JPY 5,000,000 (USD 43,084) per QALY gained, compared to diabetes support education, is 93.6%.
Conclusions: Using a newly-developed Markov model, we illustrated that lifestyle interventions for preventing kidney disease in patients with diabetes would be more cost-effective from a Japanese healthcare payer's perspective compared to diabetes support education. The model parameters in the Markov model must be updated to adapt to the Japanese setting.
Keywords: Chronic kidney disease; Cost-effectiveness; Diabetes mellitus; Lifestyle intervention.
© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to The Japanese Society of Nephrology.