The diabetic patient between sustainability and effectiveness of new treatments

J Diabetes Metab Disord. 2023 Sep 16;22(2):1635-1643. doi: 10.1007/s40200-023-01296-0. eCollection 2023 Dec.

Abstract

Objectives: The increased issuance and distribution of new agents for type 2 diabetes mellitus, due to relaxed prescribing rules, has resulted not only in a greater proximity of treatments to the patient, as envisioned by post-Covidio 19 European policies, but also in an unexpected increase in healthcare spending.

Methods: An analysis of a database called "Health Card" was performed in order to evaluate all prescriptions for the new classes of medications used for type 2 diabetes.

Results: New legislation called "note 100" was introduced in early 2022, outlining the eligibility of certain categories of drugs used for the treatment of type 2 diabetes mellitus for direct prescription by primary care physicians in Italy. This investigation therefore delves into an examination of the prescribing patterns related to these drugs, contrasting the year 2021, prior to the implementation of Note 100, with the year 2022, following the incorporation of the new legislation. The result resulted in an exponential increase in prescriptions and consumption (+ 38%) and increased healthcare spending of more than three million euros for these drug categories.

Conclusion: This analysis highlights how regulation on the one hand leads to facilitating prescribing to meet a population need that is not fully satisfied, but on the other hand leads to increased prescribing and increased health care expenditures that may likely mask phenomena of prescribing inappropriateness.

Keywords: Diabetes; Dispensing; Governance; Pharmacoutilization; Prescribing; Prescriptive analysis.