Cardiovascular Diabetology (May 2009)

Dyslipidemia treatment of patients with diabetes mellitus in a US managed care plan: a retrospective database analysis

  • Toth Peter P,
  • Zarotsky Victoria,
  • Sullivan Jane M,
  • Laitinen Dave

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1475-2840-8-26
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
p. 26

Abstract

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Abstract Background To evaluate real-world pharmacologic treatment of mixed dyslipidemia in patients with diabetes mellitus (DM). Methods All commercial health plan members in a large US managed care database with complete lipid panel results (HDL-C, LDL-C, TG) between 1/1/2006 and 12/31/2006 were identified (N = 529,236). DM patients (N = 53,679) with mixed dyslipidemia were defined as having any 2 suboptimal lipid parameters (N = 28,728). Lipid treatment status 6 months pre- and post-index date was determined using pharmacy claims for any lipid therapy. Results Post-index, 41.1% of DM patients with 2 abnormal lipid parameters and 45.1% with 3 abnormal lipid parameters did not receive lipid-modifying treatment. Post-index treatment rates were 57.4%, 63.6%, and 66.4% for patients with LDL-C, HDL-C, and TG in the most severe quartiles, respectively. Statin monotherapy was the primary lipid-modifying regimen prescribed (54.8% and 47.8% of patients with any 2 and all 3 lipids not at goal, respectively). Less than 30% of treated patients received combination therapy. Conclusion Over 40% of DM patients with mixed dyslipidemia received no lipid-modifying therapy during the follow-up period. Those who were treated were primarily prescribed statin monotherapy. This study suggests that DM patients are not being treated to ADA-suggested targets.