Journal of Diabetes Investigation (Nov 2020)
Healthcare utilization and direct medical cost in the years during and after cancer diagnosis in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus
Abstract
Abstract Aims/Introduction There is uncertainty about the direct medical costs of type 2 diabetes patients with cancers. Materials and Methods A population‐based retrospective cohort of 99,915 type 2 diabetes patients from the Hong Kong Hospital Authority between 2006 and 2017 was assembled. A total of 16,869 patients who had an initial cancer diagnosis after type 2 diabetes diagnosis were matched with 83,046 patients without cancer (controls) using a matching ratio of up to one‐to‐five propensity score‐matching method. Patients were divided into four categories according to life expectancy. Healthcare service utilization and direct medical costs during the index year, subsequent years and mortality year were compared between patients with and without cancer in each category. Results Medical costs of cancer patients in the index year ranged from $US27,533 for patients who died in 3 years. Cancer patients had significantly greater expenditures than controls in the index year (all P 3 years after the index year ($US32,558 vs $US28,260). For patients in both groups, patients who survived >3 years had significantly lower costs than those who died in 90% of the medical costs for both groups in the mortality year. Conclusions Type 2 diabetes patients with cancers incurred greater medical costs in the diagnosis, ensuing and mortality years than type 2 diabetes patients without cancers.
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