Diabetes Care, Vol 23, Issue 6 770-774, Copyright © 2000 by American Diabetes Association
Impact of type 1 and type 2 diabetes on patterns and costs of drug prescribing: a population-based study
JM Evans, TM MacDonald, GP Leese, DA Ruta and AD Morris
Department of Medicine, Ninewells Hospital, University of Dundee, Scotland, UK. josie@memo.dundee.ac.uk
OBJECTIVE: Utilization and costs of prescription drugs were investigated in
diabetic and nondiabetic patients. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: The study
was carried out in Tayside, Scotland, U.K. A validated population-based
diabetes register was used to identify patients with type 1 and type 2
diabetes, and a database of all prescriptions dispensed in the community
was used to investigate drug utilization in 1995. RESULTS: In a population
of 406,526, there were 974 (0.2%) with type 1 diabetes and 6,869 (1.7%)
with type 2 diabetes. The mean dispensed prescribing rates for all drugs
(excluding antidiabetic medication) were higher across all age-groups for
diabetic patients. After adjusting for age, patients with type 1 diabetes
were 2.07 times (95% CI 2.03-2.11) more likely and patients with type 2
diabetes were 1.70 times (1.69-1.71) more likely to be dispensed a drug
item than people without diabetes. This likelihood was increased in every
drug category, even those not directly related to diabetes, and the
proportion and cost of drug items dispensed to diabetic patients was
therefore higher than expected given the prevalence of diabetes. Upon
projecting these results to the U.K. population, it was discovered that
nearly 8% of the U.K. drug budget (Pound Sterling 350 million) is accounted
for by patients with diabetes (90% of that by patients with type 2
diabetes). CONCLUSIONS: This study highlights the increased usage and cost
of prescription drugs in diabetes, with type 2 diabetes constituting a
particular burden. It was discovered that 1.4% of drug usage in the entire
population can be accounted for by the increased prescribing rate of
diabetic patients compared with that of nondiabetic patients.