Aims
Enrollment criteria vary substantially among cardiovascular outcome trials (CVOTs) of sodium‐glucose cotransporter‐2 inhibitors (SGLT‐2is), which impacts the relationship between a trial population and the general type 2 diabetes (T2D) population. The aim of this study was to evaluate the representativeness of four SGLT‐2i CVOTs of a general T2D population.
Methods
T2D patients from Germany, The Netherlands, Norway and Sweden were included in the study. Given the available data per country, key inclusion and exclusion criteria were defined by diagnoses, procedures and drug treatments to facilitate comparability among countries. Representativeness was determined by dividing the number of patients fulfilling the key enrolment criteria of each CVOT (CANVAS, DECLARE‐TIMI 58, EMPA‐REG OUTCOME, VERTIS‐CV) by the total T2D population.
Results
In 2015, a total T2D population of 803 836 patients was identified in Germany (n = 239 485), in The Netherlands (n = 36 213), in Norway (n = 149 782) and in Sweden (n = 378 356). These populations showed a 25% to 44% cardiovascular (CV) disease baseline prevalence and high CV‐preventive drug use (>80%). The general T2D population had less prevalent CV disease and patients were slightly older than those included in the CVOTs. The DECLARE‐TIMI 58 trial had the highest representativeness, 59% compared to the general T2D population, and this representativeness was almost 2‐, 3‐ and 4‐fold higher compared to the CANVAS (34%), EMPA‐REG OUTCOME (21%) and VERTIS‐CV (17%) trials, respectively.
Conclusions
In large T2D populations within Europe, consistent patterns of representativeness of CVOTs were found when applying the main enrolment criteria. The DECLARE‐TMI 58 trial had the highest representativeness, indicating that it included and examined patients who are most representative of the general T2D patients in the studied countries.
Prurigo nodularis is an itchy skin disease with unknown epidemiology. This study aimed to describe the epidemiology of prurigo nodularis compared with that of psoriasis. The German sickness fund claims database, with 2,783,175 continuously insured patients, included 1,720 patients diagnosed with prurigo nodularis and 51,390 with psoriasis. Patients with prurigo nodularis were averagely 8 years older than psoriasis patients and more often were women (
p
< 0.001). Annual incidence was a constant 0.02% in prurigo nodularis, and decreased steadily from 0.53 to 0.42% in psoriasis; cumulative incidence was 0.1% for prurigo nodularis and 1.9% for psoriasis. Prevalence was 0.1% for prurigo nodularis and 4.7% for psoriasis, with a one-year mortality of 5.4% for prurigo nodularis and 1.2% for psoriasis (
p
< 0.001). The most frequent pre-existing comorbidities in patients with prurigo nodularis were inflammatory dermatoses and depression. This epidemiological study found a low prevalence of prurigo nodularis, manifesting different demographics and comorbidities compared with psoriasis.
Introduction
We evaluated incidence, prevalence, costs, and healthcare utilization associated with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) in patients in Germany.
Methods
Adult patients with SLE were identified from the German Betriebskrankenkassen (BKK) health insurance fund database between 2009 and 2014. SLE incidence and prevalence were calculated for each year and extrapolated (age and sex adjusted) to the German population. The 2009 SLE population was followed through 2014. Healthcare utilization and costs for patients with SLE were calculated and compared with controls matched by age, sex, and baseline Charlson Comorbidity Index scores.
Results
This analysis included 1160 patients with SLE. Estimated SLE incidence between 2009 and 2014 ranged from 4.59 to 6.89 per 100,000 persons and prevalence ranged from 37.32 to 47.36 per 100,000. SLE incidence in Germany in 2014 was 8.82 per 100,000 persons; prevalence was 55.80 (corrected for right-censored data). At baseline, 12.8, 41.7, and 45.5% of patients were categorized as having mild, moderate, and severe SLE, respectively. Patients with SLE had greater mean (standard deviation [SD]) annual medical costs compared with matched controls 1 year after index diagnosis (€6895 [14,424] vs. €3692 [3994];
P
< 0.0001) and in subsequent years. Patients with moderate or severe SLE had significantly more hospitalizations, outpatient visits, and prescription medication use compared with matched controls. Mean annual costs for 5 years ranged from €1890 to 3010, €4867 to 5876, and €8396 to 10,001 for patients with mild, moderate, and severe SLE, respectively.
Conclusions
SLE incidence in Germany increased 1.4-fold over 5 years. Patients with SLE have higher healthcare costs, and costs increase with baseline severity. Early and effective treatments may delay progression and reduce the burden of SLE.
Supplementary Information
The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s40744-021-00277-0.
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