Autor: |
Jasmin Sekhon, Dorothy Graham, Chhaya Mehrotra, Ian Li |
Rok vydání: |
2022 |
Předmět: |
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Zdroj: |
The AustralianNew Zealand journal of obstetricsgynaecologyReferences. |
ISSN: |
1479-828X |
Popis: |
Women with type one diabetes experience poorer obstetric outcomes than normoglycaemic women in pregnancy.To investigate the cost and clinical effectiveness of continuous glucose monitoring (GCM) compared to self-monitoring of blood glucose in improving obstetric outcomes in women with type one diabetes during pregnancy.This retrospective cohort study included women with type one diabetes referred to a state-wide tertiary obstetric centre before and after the introduction of government-funded CGMs in Australia in March 2019. Forty-nine women using CGMs were propensity matched on a range of clinical features with a historical group of 49 women with type one diabetes who exclusively used intermittent self-monitoring of blood in the year prior to the introduction of funding of sensors. Medical records and administrative cost data were audited to quantify cost and clinical effectiveness.There were significantly lower pre-term (95% CI 0.39-0.922; P = 0.026) and very pre-term birth rates (95% CI 1.002-1.184; P = 0.041) in the CGM group. There was a significant reduction in the length of antenatal inpatient hospital stay (P 0.01) and adult special care unit stay (P = 0.013) and neonatal admission to the neonatal intensive care unit (P = 0.0262) in the continuous glucose monitoring group. CGMs represented a net cost saving to the health care sector of $12 063 per pregnancy where the device was used, with an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of $3275 per prevented pre-term birth.CGM use in pregnancy is a cost-effective intervention for reducing the risk of pre-term birth in women with type one diabetes, resulting in a net cost benefit to the health sector. |
Databáze: |
OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |
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