1. Cost-effectiveness of healthy eating and/or physical activity promotion in pregnant women at increased risk of gestational diabetes mellitus
- Author
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Roland Devlieger, Sander Galjaard, Maria Grazia Dalfrà, Frank J. Snoek, Goele Jans, Peter Damm, Judith G. M. Jelsma, Gernot Desoye, Annunziata Lapolla, Mireille N M van Poppel, Karen Broekhuizen, Jürgen Harreiter, Alexandra Kautzky-Willer, Ewa Wender-Ozegowska, Lise Lotte Torvin Andersen, Johanna M. van Dongen, Elisabeth R. Mathiesen, Agnieszka Zawiejska, Fidelma Dunne, David Simmons, André Van Assche, David Hill, Rosa Corcoy, Juan M. Adelantado, Dorte Møller Jensen, Judith E. Bosmans, Alessandra Bertolotto, Public and occupational health, Medical psychology, APH - Health Behaviors & Chronic Diseases, APH - Mental Health, Division 6, Amsterdam Reproduction & Development (AR&D), APH - Quality of Care, Obstetrics & Gynecology, Health Economics and Health Technology Assessment, APH - Methodology, AMS - Ageing and Morbidity, and Medical Psychology
- Subjects
Lifestyle intervention ,endocrine system diseases ,Healthy Diet ,Cost effectiveness ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,Psychological intervention ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Cost-effectiveness ,Economic evaluation ,Gestational diabetes ,Pregnant women ,Adult ,Diabetes, Gestational ,Europe ,Female ,Health Promotion ,Humans ,Insulin Resistance ,Pregnancy ,Program Evaluation ,Quality-Adjusted Life Years ,Exercise ,law.invention ,euroqol ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,030212 general & internal medicine ,lcsh:RC620-627 ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Obstetrics ,lcsh:Public aspects of medicine ,Diabetes ,3. Good health ,lcsh:Nutritional diseases. Deficiency diseases ,Gestational ,medicine.symptom ,Diet, Healthy ,metaanalysis ,life ,medicine.medical_specialty ,weight-gain ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Clinical nutrition ,03 medical and health sciences ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,Intervention (counseling) ,medicine ,interventions ,business.industry ,Research ,lcsh:RA1-1270 ,medicine.disease ,states ,Quality-adjusted life year ,business ,Weight gain - Abstract
Background: Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) is associated with perinatal health risks to both mother and offspring, and represents a large economic burden. The DALI study is a multicenter randomized controlled trial, undertaken to add to the knowledge base on the effectiveness of interventions for pregnant women at increased risk for GDM. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of the healthy eating and/or physical activity promotion intervention compared to usual care among pregnant women at increased risk of GDM from a societal perspective.Methods: An economic evaluation was performed alongside a European multicenter-randomized controlled trial. A total of 435 pregnant women at increased risk of GDM in primary and secondary care settings in nine European countries, were recruited and randomly allocated to a healthy eating and physical activity promotion intervention (HE + PA intervention), a healthy eating promotion intervention (HE intervention), or a physical activity promotion intervention (PA intervention). Main outcome measures were gestational weight gain, fasting glucose, insulin resistance (HOMA-IR), quality adjusted life years (QALYs), and societal costs.Results: Between-group total cost and effect differences were not significant, besides significantly less gestational weight gain in the HE + PA group compared with the usual care group at 35–37 weeks (−2.3;95%CI:-3.7;-0.9). Cost-effectiveness acceptability curves indicated that the HE + PA intervention was the preferred intervention strategy. At 35–37 weeks, it depends on the decision-makers' willingness to pay per kilogram reduction in gestational weight gain whether the HE + PA intervention is cost-effective for gestational weight gain, whereas it was not cost-effective for fasting glucose and HOMA-IR. After delivery, the HE + PA intervention was cost-effective for QALYs, which was predominantly caused by a large reduction in delivery-related costs.Conclusions: Healthy eating and physical activity promotion was found to be the preferred strategy for limiting gestational weight gain. As this intervention was cost-effective for QALYs after delivery, this study lends support for broad implementation.Trial registration: ISRCTN ISRCTN70595832. Registered 2 December 2011.
- Published
- 2018
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