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Motivational enhancement therapy with and without cognitive behaviour therapy for Type 1 diabetes: economic evaluation from a randomized controlled trial
Author(s) -
Patel A.,
Maissi E.,
Chang H.C.,
Rodrigues I.,
Smith M.,
Thomas S.,
Chalder T.,
Schmidt U.,
Treasure J.,
Ismail K.
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
diabetic medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.474
H-Index - 145
eISSN - 1464-5491
pISSN - 0742-3071
DOI - 10.1111/j.1464-5491.2010.03198.x
Subject(s) - medicine , randomized controlled trial , type 2 diabetes , cognition , diabetes mellitus , cognitive therapy , physical therapy , cognitive behavioral therapy , psychotherapist , psychiatry , endocrinology , psychology
Diabet. Med. 28, 470–479 (2011) Abstract Aims To assess the cost‐effectiveness of motivational enhancement therapy and cognitive behaviour therapy for poorly controlled Type 1 diabetes. Methods Within‐trial prospective economic evaluation from (i) health and social care and (ii) societal perspectives. Three hundred and forty‐four adults with Type 1 diabetes for at least 2 years and persistent, suboptimal glycaemic control were recruited to a three‐arm multi‐centre randomized controlled trial in London and Manchester, UK. They were randomized to (i) usual care plus four sessions of motivational enhancement therapy (ii) usual care plus four sessions of motivational enhancement therapy and eight sessions of cognitive behaviour therapy or (iii) usual care alone. Outcomes were (i) costs, (ii) Quality‐Adjusted Life Year gains measured by the EuroQol 5‐dimensional health state index and the 36‐item Short Form and (iii) diabetes control measured by change in HbA 1c level at 1 year. Results Both intervention groups had significantly higher mean health and social care costs (+ £535 for motivational enhancement therapy and + £790 for combined motivational enhancement and cognitive behavioural therapy ), but not societal costs compared with the usual‐care group. There were no differences in Quality Adjusted Life Years. There was a significantly greater HbA 1c improvement in the combined motivational enhancement and cognitive behavioural therapy group (+ 0.45%; incremental cost‐effectiveness ratio = £1756), but the not in the motivational enhancement therapy group. Cost‐effectiveness acceptability curves suggested that both interventions had low probabilities of cost‐effectiveness based on Quality Adjusted Life Years (but high based on HbA 1c improvements). Imputing missing costs and outcomes confirmed these findings. Conclusions Neither therapy was undisputedly cost‐effective compared with usual care alone, but conclusions vary depending on the relative importance of clinical and quality‐of‐life outcomes.