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Pharmaceutical Costs in Obese Individuals
Comparison With a Randomly Selected Population Sample and Long-term Changes After Conventional and Surgical Treatment: The SOS Intervention Study
Kristina Narbro, PhD;
Göran Ågren, MD;
Egon Jonsson, PhD;
Ingmar Näslund, MD, PhD;
Lars Sjöström, MD, PhD;
Markku Peltonen, PhD
Arch Intern Med. 2002;162:2061-2069.
ABSTRACT
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Background Obesity is associated with increased morbidity rates and pharmaceutical
costs. To what extent various medication costs are affected by intentional
weight loss is unknown.
Methods A cross-sectional comparison of the use of prescribed pharmaceuticals
was conducted in 1286 obese individuals in the Swedish Obese Subjects (SOS)
intervention study and 958 randomly selected reference individuals. Medication
changes for 6 years after bariatric surgery were evaluated in 510 surgically
and 455 conventionally treated SOS patients.
Results Compared with the reference group, obese individuals were more often
taking diabetes mellitus, cardiovascular disease, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory
and pain, and asthma medications (risk ratios ranging from 2.3-9.2). Average
annual costs for all medications were 1400 Swedish kronor (SEK) (US $140)
in obese individuals and 800 SEK (US $80) in the reference population (P<.001). Average yearly medication costs during follow-up
were 1849 (US $185) in surgically treated patients (weight change -16%)
and 1905 SEK (US $190) in weight-stable conventionally treated patients (P = .87). The surgical group had lower costs for diabetes
mellitus (difference: -94 SEK/y (-US $9]) and cardiovascular disease
medications (difference: -186 SEK/y (-US $19]) but higher costs
for gastrointestinal tract disorder (difference: +135 SEK/y [US $13]) and
anemia and vitamin deficiency medications (difference: +50 SEK/y [US $5]).
Conclusions Use and cost of medications are markedly increased in obese vs reference
populations. Surgical obesity treatment lowers diabetes mellitus and cardiovascular
disease medication costs but increases other medication costs, resulting in
similar total costs for surgically and conventionally treated obese individuals
for 6 years.
INTRODUCTION
OBESITY IS associated with elevated morbidity and mortality rates.1 The prevalence of type 2 diabetes mellitus, hypertension,
gallbladder disease, and osteoarthritis and the proportion of individuals
with 2 or more obesity-related comorbidities increase with increasing weight.2 The high morbidity rate and the associated increased
drug use3-6 among
obese persons are costly for society and the individual. It has been estimated
that 1% to 6% of the health care expenses in affluent countries are attributable
to obesity1 and that approximately 30% of these
costs are pharmaceutical costs for treating obesity-related disorders.6-9
Intentional weight loss in the obese population can reduce cardiovascular
risk factors10-15 and
the associated use of medication,16-21 although
the long-term effects on hypertension have recently been questioned.22 Few studies16-17 have
calculated the effect of weight loss on pharmaceutical costs for specific
obesity-related diseases. Recently, we23 reported
a long-term reduction in the use of diabetes mellitus and cardiovascular
disease (CVD)-related medications after maintained weight loss for 6 years
in the obese population. In the present study, we compare the use and cost
of prescribed medications in the obese population with a random sample of
the general population and provide estimates for changes in the use and total
cost of prescribed medications for 6 years after surgical treatment for obesity,
based on data from the Swedish Obese Subjects (SOS) controlled intervention
trial. Our hypotheses are that the obese population has elevated medication
costs compared with the general population and that obesity surgery and weight
reduction can reduce medication costs in the obese population.
METHODS
SOS STUDY
The SOS project is an ongoing nationwide intervention trial of obesity
that began in 1987.24 The primary aim is to
determine whether mortality and morbidity rates in obese persons can be reduced
by surgical treatment and weight reduction. The SOS project consists of 2
parts: a cross-sectional registry study and a controlled, prospective intervention
study. A (so far) cross-sectional population study of randomly selected individuals
from the general population is also affiliated with the project.
The registry study consisted of a survey of 6328 obese persons including
extensive questionnaires and a health examination at primary health care centers.
In the intervention study, 2010 surgically treated obese patients will be
compared for 20 years with a control group of 2037 matched obese patients
who are offered conventional treatment at their primary health care centers.
The study involves 480 primary health care centers and 25 surgical departments
throughout Sweden. The inclusion criteria for the intervention study were
age 37 to 60 years and body mass index (BMI; calculated as weight in kilograms
divided by the square of height in meters) of 34 or greater for men and 38
or greater for women. The exclusion criteria were previous bariatric surgery;
previous gastric operations; gastric or duodenal ulcer in the past 6 months;
active malignancy in the past 5 years; myocardial infarction in the past 6
months; a bulimic eating pattern; abuse of alcohol, narcotics, or psychopharmaceutical
drugs; psychosocial problems suspected to result in poor cooperation; regular
use of cortisone or nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs); and other
severe illnesses.
Patients who were interested in surgery and met the inclusion but not
the exclusion criteria were invited to discuss bariatric surgery with a surgeon.
Individuals who subsequently accepted surgery formed the surgical group and
were treated with gastric banding, gastric bypass, or vertical banded gastroplasty
according to the local practice at the surgical department concerned.25 The conventionally treated control group was selected
from eligible patients in the registry study by using a computerized matching
procedure, taking into account sex and 18 matching variables related to morbidity
and mortality. The matching procedure was designed to make the mean values
of the matching variables as similar as possible in the 2 treatment groups.
The variables used in the matching procedure, apart from sex, were age, height,
weight, waist and hip circumferences, waist-hip ratio, systolic blood pressure,
total serum cholesterol level, triglyceride levels, smoking, diabetes mellitus,
premenopausal/postmenopausal state among women, 4 psychosocial variables related
to mortality, and 2 personality traits related to treatment preferences. Patients
in the control group receive the same treatment as obese patients in general
at different primary care centers, which could include dietary advice, behavior
modification, a very-low-calorie diet, and physical training, or no treatment
at all, according to local practices.
Follow-up visits are performed by outpatient appointments and dispatched
questionnaires at 6 months and 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 15, and 20 years after
inclusion. Enrollment of patients into the registry and intervention studies
was completed in January 2001.
The SOS reference study is a population study conducted in the county
of Mölndal in southern Sweden during 1994 to 1999.26 A
random sample of 1752 men and women aged 37 to 60 years was selected from
the population registry. The reference population was examined by using identical
questionnaires and a health examination similar to participants in the SOS
registry study. Follow-up examinations are planned after 10, 15, and 20 years.
PRESENT STUDY
To estimate the use and cost of medications in an obese population in
relation to that of a general population, we performed a cross-sectional investigation
comparing baseline data on the use and cost of medications from the first
1294 consecutive patients (surgically and conventionally treated patients
combined) in the SOS intervention study with corresponding data from baseline
examinations in the reference study. Data on medications were available for
958 individuals (54.7%) in the reference population and for 1286 (99.4%) in
the SOS intervention study.
To estimate the effect of surgical treatment and weight reduction on
the use and cost of medications for 6 years, a longitudinal comparison was
undertaken on the first 647 surgically treated patients and the first 647
conventionally treated patients from the SOS intervention study. These 1294
patients, included between 1987 and 1992, are the same as were used in the
comparison with the reference study previously mentioned. Only individuals
with complete 6-year follow-up were included in this comparison (n = 965).
Owing to mortality and dropouts, the 6-year data were not available for 137
patients (21.2%) in the surgical group and 192 (29.7%) in the conventionally
treated group.
The SOS projects are approved by the ethics committees of all universities
in Sweden, and all participants gave their consent to participate. The study
is being conducted in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki as amended.27
MEASUREMENTS
Body weight, rounded to the nearest 0.1 kg, was measured with participants
wearing indoor clothing and no shoes. Height was measured with participants
not wearing shoes and was rounded to the nearest 0.01 m. Information on prescribed
medications, including dosage and strength, was collected from questionnaires
filled out by all participants at inclusion in the SOS reference and intervention
studies. In the questionnaire, individuals were asked to "list here the brand
name, strength, and number of tablets or milliliters per day of all prescribed
drugs that you have taken regularly during the past 3 months." The same questionnaires
were used at the 6-month and 1-, 2-, 3-, 4-, and 6-year follow-up visits in
the SOS intervention study. Temporary medications were excluded, and 1 person
in the intervention study was excluded from the cost calculations because
of extreme costs for cancer medications. All drugs were classified according
to the Anatomic Therapeutic Classification (ATC) system, and 8 drug categories
were defined:
- Diabetes mellitus: ATC group A10 (drugs used in diabetes mellitus).
- Cardiovascular disease: ATC groups C01 (cardiac therapy), C02
(antihypertensives), C03 (diuretics), C07 (
-adrenergic blocking agents),
C08 (calcium channel blockers), and C09 (agents acting on the renin-angiotensin
system).
- Muscle inflammation, rheumatic disorders, and pain (NSAIDs/pain):
ATC groups M01A (anti-inflammatory and antirheumatic products, nonsteroids),
M03 (muscle relaxants), N02A (opioids), and N02B (other analgesics and antipyretics).
- Asthma: ATC group R03 (antiasthmatics).
- Psychiatric disorders: ATC groups N05 (psycholeptics) and N06
(psychoanaleptics).
- Anemia and vitamin deficiency (anemia): ATC groups A11 (vitamins)
and B03 (antianemic preparations).
- Gastrointestinal tract disorders (GID): ATC groups A02 (antacids
and drugs for treatment of peptic ulcer and flatulence), A03 (antispasmodic
and anticholinergic agents and propulsives), A04 (antiemetics and antinauseants),
A05 (bile and liver therapy), A06 (laxatives), and A07 (antidiarrheals and
intestinal anti-inflammatory/anti-infective agents).
- Other: all other prescribed drugs.
The individual daily costs were calculated for each specific drug and
dosage according to the 1997 official price list of the National Corporation
of Swedish Pharmacies. When necessary because of deregistration of drugs,
an earlier price list was used and the prices were converted into 1997 price
levels by means of the Swedish consumer price index.
In the questionnaires, participants were asked about drug use during
the previous 3 months. Assuming that use of medications was the same for the
whole period covered by the questionnaire (years -1 to 0, 0 to 0.5,
0.5 to 1, 1 to 2, 2 to 3, 3 to 4, and 4 to 6), the daily costs were summed
for each drug and individual to estimate the drug-specific medication cost
for each period. To estimate the average yearly cost during 6-year follow-up
after obesity treatment, a weighted average of the period costs was calculated.
All costs are reported in Swedish kronor (SEK) using the following exchange
rate from August 2001: 1 SEK US $0.10 and 0.11 Euro.
STATISTICAL ANALYSES
Differences in the proportion of participants taking medications between
the SOS intervention study and the reference population were analyzed in a
generalized linear model for the binomial family.28 We
report unadjusted proportions and adjusted risk ratios (adjusted to the mean
values of age, sex, and smoking). For surgically and conventionally treated
groups in the SOS intervention study, changes in the proportions of obese
persons taking medications at follow-up were compared similarly, and risk
ratios were adjusted to the mean values of age, sex, and BMI at baseline.
When comparing medication costs for the obese and reference populations and
changes for the surgically and conventionally treated groups, we report mean
values in each group. Owing to skewed distribution of the cost variables,
statistical tests of equality between the groups were performed by constructing
confidence intervals (CIs) based on bootstrap percentiles.29 The
number of bootstrap samples was set at 1000. For the surgically and conventionally
treated groups in the SOS intervention study, differences in the use and costs
of medication were analyzed separately for patients receiving and not receiving
the respective medications at baseline and for all participants combined.
The data were analyzed using a statistics package (Stata, release 6.0; Stata
Corp, College Station, Tex).
RESULTS
CROSS-SECTIONAL COMPARISON OF THE OBESE AND RANDOMLY SELECTED REFERENCE
POPULATIONS
The clinical characteristics at baseline for the 1286 obese patients
(mean BMI, 41.0) in the SOS intervention study and the 958 randomly selected
reference individuals (mean BMI, 25.0) from the SOS reference study are given
in Table 1. The reference group
had a higher proportion of men and higher age compared with the obese group.
Fifty-two percent of the obese and 36% of the randomly selected individuals
were taking prescribed medications (P<.001), and
the average cost during 1 year for this medication was markedly higher (77%)
in the obese group (1387 vs 783 SEK; P<.001).
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Table 1. Baseline Characteristics of Obese Individuals in the SOS Intervention
Study and the Randomly Selected Reference Population*
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Compared with the randomly selected reference group, the obese patients
in the SOS intervention study were more often taking diabetes mellitus, CVD,
NSAIDs/pain, and asthma medications (Table
2). The risk ratio of having medications for these conditions varied
between 2.3 and 9.2 in the obese group compared with the reference group.
Accordingly, the average yearly costs of these medication groups were markedly
higher in obese individuals (Table 2).
None of the other medication groups showed statistically significant differences
in costs between groups.
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Table 2. Proportion Taking Medications and Average Cost of Medications
in Obese Individuals in the SOS Intervention Study Compared With the Reference
Population*
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In the obese population, the most expensive drug group, measured as
average yearly cost per person, was CVD (457 SEK), followed by the groups
other medication (227 SEK), GID (177 SEK), and asthma (155 SEK). The lowest
costs were for the drug groups psychiatric disorders (99 SEK) and anemia (7
SEK). In the reference population, the average annual cost was highest for
the drug group other medication (298 SEK). High costs were also seen for the
drug groups GID (144 SEK), psychiatric disorders (141 SEK), and CVD (131 SEK).
THE LONGITUDINAL SOS INTERVENTION STUDY
Baseline Weight and Weight Changes
Table 3 gives the baseline
characteristics of the 965 obese patients who completed the 6-year follow-up
in the SOS intervention study. There were no baseline differences between
the completers (Table 3) and the
321 noncompleters (these being part of the 1286 individuals reported in Table 1) with respect to the proportion
of men, age, or BMI, but the proportion of smokers was higher among noncompleters
(32.8% vs 24.4%; P = .004).
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Table 3. Baseline Characteristics of Surgically and Conventionally
Treated Obese Individuals With Complete 6-Year Follow-up in the SOS Intervention
Study*
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The surgically treated group had a somewhat lower age and a higher BMI
than the conventionally treated group (Table 3). During follow-up, the surgically treated group reached
a maximum weight loss of 25% after 1 year, whereas there were no changes in
the mean body weight in the conventionally treated group. After 6 years, the
relative weight change was +1% in the conventionally treated group and -16%
in the surgically treated group (Figure 1).
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Figure 1. Relative weight change per year
in the surgically and conventionally treated groups in the Swedish Obese Subjects
intervention study. Error bars represent 95% confidence intervals.
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Total Cost of Medications at Baseline and During Follow-up
The total cost of medications per person and year increased from 1386
to 2607 SEK during the 6 years of follow-up in the surgically treated group
and from 1261 to 2633 SEK in the conventionally treated group (adjusted difference
in change, -88 SEK; 95% CI, -595 to 418 SEK) (Figure 2). The average yearly total cost during the 6 years of follow-up
was similar in surgically (1849 SEK) and conventionally (1905 SEK) treated
participants (Table 4). To eliminate
the possible direct, short-term effects of bariatric surgery and other obesity
treatments on medication, we excluded the costs during the first year after
inclusion in the intervention study and calculated average yearly costs during
years 2 to 6 of follow-up. The results were similar in that there were no
clear differences between the treatment groups: the average yearly cost was
1950 SEK in the surgical group and 2048 SEK in the conventionally treated
group (adjusted difference, -43 SEK; 95% CI, -347 to 235 SEK).
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Figure 2. Total cost of medications per
person and year in the conventionally and surgically treated groups in the
Swedish Obese Subjects intervention study. Error bars represent 95% confidence
intervals.
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Table 4. Average Yearly Cost During the Year Before Inclusion and for
6 Years of Follow-up in 509* Surgically and 455 Conventionally Treated Obese
Individuals in the SOS Intervention Study for All Prescribed Drugs Combined
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Drug-Specific Costs at Baseline and During Follow-up
Costs for specific drug groups during the year preceding inclusion in
the study are given in Table 5.
The cost for diabetes mellitus medication was higher in the surgical group
(adjusted difference, 97 SEK; 95% CI, 11-205 SEK) compared with the conventionally
treated group. Costs for the other medication groups did not differ significantly
between treatment groups.
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Table 5. Average Yearly Cost During the Year Before Inclusion and for
6 Years of Follow-up for Each Medication Group in 509* Surgically and 455
Conventionally Treated Obese Individuals in the SOS Intervention Study
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Average drug-specific costs for 6 years of follow-up are given in Table 5. Surgically treated patients had
markedly lower average yearly costs for diabetes mellitus (-69%) and
CVD (-31%) medications but higher costs than conventionally treated
obese patients for the drug groups GID and anemia.
Change in Proportion of Participants Taking and Not Taking Medication
Of obese individuals taking any medications at baseline, the surgically
treated group had a lower proportion taking medications at all follow-up times
starting at year 1 compared with the conventionally treated group (Figure 3). After 6 years, 76.7% in the surgically
treated group and 90.0% in the conventionally treated group were still taking
medications (adjusted risk ratio, 0.90; 95% CI, 0.83-0.97).
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Figure 3. Proportion of patients taking
medications in the conventionally and surgically treated groups in the Swedish
Obese Subjects intervention study for all prescribed drugs combined. Patients
taking medication (262 surgically and 220 conventionally treated) had at least
1 prescribed drug at baseline. Patients not taking medication (248 surgically
and 235 conventionally treated) did not have any prescribed drugs at baseline.
Asterisk indicates a statistically significant difference at P =
.05, adjusted for age, sex, and body mass index at baseline.
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Of obese individuals not taking any medications at baseline, the proportion
starting medication use increased steadily over time in the conventionally
treated group (Figure 3). Except
for a significant but transient spike in consumption at 6 and 12 months, which
was mostly due to a high intake of anemia and vitamin deficiency medications,
the development was almost identical in the surgical group. At 6-year follow-up,
the proportion of patients taking any type of prescribed drug was 44.8% in
the surgically treated group and 43.0% in the conventionally treated group
(adjusted risk ratio, 1.10; 95% CI, 0.76-1.60).
Total Costs at Baseline and During Follow-up Among Those Taking and
Not Taking Medication at Baseline
Surgically and conventionally treated patients taking medications at
baseline had similar total medication costs during the year before study inclusion
(Table 4). During follow-up of
these individuals, the average yearly medication cost was lower in the surgical
group than in the control group, as reflected by the unadjusted difference
(-439 SEK; 95% CI, -911 to -90 SEK). When taking into account
differences in the baseline levels of age, BMI, sex, and cost of medications,
the difference between groups was not statistically significant (adjusted
difference, -295 SEK; 95% CI, -807 to 149 SEK).
By definition, patients not taking medications at baseline had no costs
during the year before inclusion. The average annual cost for 6 years in these
individuals was not statistically significantly different in the surgically
(865 SEK) and conventionally (715 SEK) treated groups (adjusted difference,
160 SEK; 95% CI, -115 to 449 SEK) (Table 4).
Drug-Specific Costs During Follow-up in Those Taking and Not Taking
Medications at Baseline
Figure 4 gives the average
annual costs for 6 years for specific drug groups in individuals taking and
not taking medications at baseline. Patients in the surgically treated group
who were receiving diabetes mellitus and CVD medications at baseline had significantly
lower average costs for these medication groups during follow-up compared
with the conventionally treated group (Figure
4A). Furthermore, the costs for asthma and GID medications were
higher in the conventionally treated group compared with the surgical group,
but these differences did not reach statistical significance (asthma: adjusted
difference, -877 SEK; 95% CI, -2304 to 673 SEK; GID: adjusted
difference, -970 SEK, 95% CI -2180 to 38 SEK).
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Figure 4. Unadjusted average cost per year
for 6 years of follow-up for each medication group in the Swedish Obese Subjects
intervention study in persons taking (A) and not taking (B) the respective
medications at baseline. The numbers in parentheses are the number of conventionally/surgically
treated individuals in each group at baseline. Error bars represent 95% confidence
intervals. Asterisk indicates a statistically significant difference at P = .05, adjusted for age, sex, body mass index, and the drug-specific
medication cost at baseline. CVD indicates cardiovascular disease; NSAIDs,
nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs; PD, psychiatric disorders; GID, gastrointestinal
tract disorder; and SEK, Swedish kronor. For other details on medication groups,
see the "Methods" section.
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Among patients who were not taking medications at baseline, the average
annual cost for 6 years for diabetes mellitus (adjusted difference, -52
SEK; 95% CI, -78 to -30 SEK) and CVD (adjusted difference, -105
SEK; 95% CI, -186 to -32 SEK) medications were again lower in
the surgically treated group compared with the conventionally treated group
(Figure 4B). However, the surgical
group had higher average costs for the drug groups NSAIDs/pain, GID, and anemia.
The adjusted difference in the average annual costs between groups was 83
SEK (95% CI, 11-166 SEK) for NSAIDs/pain, 160 SEK (95% CI, 56-278 SEK) for
GID, and 50 SEK (95% CI, 36-66 SEK) for anemia. As reported previously, the
net effect of all differences in Figure 4 resulted in approximately equal annual costs per person for 6 years
in surgically (1849 SEK) and conventionally (1905 SEK) treated obese patients.
COMMENT
The cross-sectional part of this study shows that compared with a randomly
selected sample from the general population, the total annual cost of prescribed
medications is 77% higher in obese individuals (783 vs 1387 SEK per year and
person). Use of diabetes mellitus medications was 9 times more common and
use of CVD medications was 4 times more common in the obese population.
Although cross-sectional studies3-4 have
reported total use of medications in lean and obese individuals and some studies7-9 have estimated the total
cost of medications in the obese, only 3 additional studies,5-6,30 to
our knowledge, have measured total use and calculated the corresponding total
cost of medications in lean and obese individuals. Compared with BMI in the
reference range, a BMI greater than 30 or 35 was associated with a 55%6 to 78%5 increase in
pharmaceutical costs. These values from the United States and France are thus
in agreement with our Swedish findings. So far, to our knowledge, there is
only one study30 available comparing costs
for a couple specific medication groups in lean and obese individuals. In
that retrospective cohort study, the total pharmaceutical cost was doubled
in obese individuals, and the annual cost for 9 years was 13 times higher
for diabetes mellitus medications and 3 times higher for cardiovascular medications
compared with normal weight individuals. In our study, large and statistically
significant cost increases in the obese population were seen for the drug
groups CVD, diabetes mellitus, asthma, and NSAIDs/pain compared with corresponding
costs in the general population.
Our cross-sectional data indicate the potential cost savings for specific
groups of medication. However, the available medical and surgical treatments
for obesity rarely eliminate all of the patient's overweight and comorbidities.
Therefore, it is not likely that the medication costs could be reduced to
the same level as in the general population, even after substantial and sustained
weight reductions. In fact, a recent study implies that a sustained weight
reduction of at least 10% to 15% is needed to substantially reduce the use
of medication for diabetes mellitus and CVD after 6 years.23
During 6 years of follow-up, the yearly inflation-adjusted total cost
of medications increased continuously from 1261 to 2633 SEK in the conventionally
treated, weight-stable obese group. In the surgically treated group, with
an average weight loss of 16% in 6 years, the development was similar (from
1386 to 2607 SEK), and the annual average cost during 6-year follow-up was
not significantly different between the 2 groups. Cost reductions were seen
for diabetes mellitus medications (69% lower cost than for conventional treatment)
and CVD medications (31% lower cost than for conventional treatment) in the
surgically treated patients, but these savings were balanced by higher costs
for other groups of medication, particularly GID, NSAIDs/pain, and anemia.
The lack of effect of intentional weight loss on total cost of medications
in our prospective, controlled intervention study for 6 years is difficult
to compare with other studies because they are only reporting use or costs
of some specific medication. However, long-term retrospective21 (9-
and 6-year) and prospective22 (8-year) surgical
studies with weight-stable obese control groups clearly indicate that the
incidence of and recovery from diabetes mellitus are markedly improved by
intentional weight loss. The study by MacDonald et al21 and
two 1-year, randomized antiobesity drug trials18, 31 in
obese patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus reported reduced use of diabetes
mellitus medications. Finally, 2 short-term ( 1 year) noncontrolled weight
loss studies16-17 found reduced
use and cost of diabetes mellitus medications. Our controlled 6-year data
show that the use and cost of diabetes mellitus medications was reduced by
intentional weight loss in patients taking and not taking diabetes mellitus
medications at baseline.
Several studies, lacking a weight-stable control group32-33 or
being short-term observations,15, 19, 34 have
reported reduced use of medications for hypertension after weight loss. In
addition, long-term (3- to 4-year) randomized intervention studies20, 35 of patients with hypertension have
shown that weight loss reduces the amount of medication needed to reach a
target blood pressure. Furthermore, one small, uncontrolled, short-term study17 reported decreased medication costs after pharmaceutical
treatment of obesity. Our controlled data show a reduction in all CVD medication
costs after long-term sustained weight loss.
In a recent intervention trial36 of obese
persons with asthma, weight reduction achieved by dietary means was associated
with reduced symptoms of asthma and reduced use of oral corticosteroids, although
the use of rescue medications was not changed in 1 year. Surgically induced
weight loss has also been reported to have a beneficial effect on asthma and
asthma medication use,37-38 but
these 2 studies were small and lacked control groups. In the present study,
the surgically treated group tended to have lower costs for asthma medications
during follow-up. However, this difference vs the conventionally treated group
did not reach full significance, and the proportion of patients continuing
their use of asthma medications did not differ between the 2 obese treatment
groups in our study.
The following limitations of our study have to be considered. First,
the baseline data for the SOS intervention study population and the medication
data for the general population were collected during different periods. The
introduction and widespread use of new pharmaceuticals, for example, antidepressants
and proton pump inhibitors, and new guidelines for the treatment of diabetes
mellitus during recent years has probably affected the expenses more in the
general population group, which was studied later. Thus, the cost differences
between the obese and general populations could be even more pronounced than
indicated by our data. On the other hand, data on medication use were available
for only approximately 55% of the reference population, and the state of health
of nonrespondents is unknown. If more diseased individuals were less likely
to participate, the use of medication might be underestimated in the general
population. Still, the comparison provides a comprehensive, albeit rough,
estimate of various medical costs associated with obesity, particularly because
the reference group was randomly selected. Second, the SOS intervention study
is based on a selected group of individuals. Participants were self-selected
and were recruited by advertisements in public media. Furthermore, several
exclusion criteria were used. To be included in the SOS intervention study,
the patients had to be operable and also eligible according to the study protocol.
Therefore, obese individuals with severe illnesses, abuse, and so on, were
not allowed to enter the study. Thus, our study population probably has a
better health status than the general obese population. Third, information
on the use of medications was self-reported and was collected from dispatched
questionnaires, which could affect the reliability of the data. Because we
had no access to objective data on drug consumption, we could not validate
these questions. However, information on medication use in the reference population
was obtained by the same methods as in the intervention study. Finally, we
cannot preclude the possibility that participation in the study per se could
affect medication use. Participation in the study, with repeated health examinations,
could theoretically increase awareness of symptoms and the likelihood of detection
of various comorbidities.
In conclusion, medication use for diabetes mellitus and CVD is markedly
increased and medication use for muscle inflammation, rheumatic disorders,
and pain and for asthma is moderately increased in obese individuals compared
with the general population. Thus, obese persons have considerably higher
medication costs than the general population. The total pharmaceutical costs
for 6 years are not reduced by an average weight reduction of 16%, achieved
by surgical treatment of obesity. Surgically treated patients have lower pharmaceutical
costs for diabetes mellitus and cardiovascular disease, but this cost reduction
is counterbalanced by a postoperative increase in medication costs for muscle
inflammation, rheumatic disorders, and pain; gastrointestinal disorders; and
anemia and vitamin deficiency. It remains to be studied whether large, maintained,
intentional weight losses affect the total cost of medications in 10 to 20
years or in the remaining lifetime.
AUTHOR INFORMATION
Accepted for publication February 27, 2002.
This study was supported by grant 05239 from The Swedish Medical Research
Council, Stockholm, Sweden; Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd, Basel, Switzerland; the
Volvo Research Foundation, Göteborg; Centre for Public Sector Research,
Göteborg; The Swedish Social Welfare Board, Stockholm; the Ministry of
Education, Stockholm; Scandia Insurance, Stockholm; and the Research Committee
of Örebro County Council, Örebro, Sweden.
This study was presented as a poster at the 11th European Congress on
Obesity, Vienna, Austria, May 31, 2001.
We are grateful to members of the steering, laboratory, and safety monitoring
committees of the Swedish Obese Subjects Intervention Study and to the staff
at the 25 surgical clinics and 480 primary health care centers in Sweden for
their help and cooperation.
Corresponding author and reprints: Kristina Narbro, PhD, SOS secretariat,
Department of Internal Medicine, Sahlgrenska University Hospital, SE-413 45
Göteborg, Sweden (e-mail: kristina.narbro{at}medfak.gu.se).
From the Department of Medicine, Göteborg University, Sahlgrenska
University Hospital, Göteborg (Drs Narbro, Sjöström, and Peltonen),
the Department of Surgery, Örebro University Hospital, Örebro (Drs
Ågren and Näslund), and The Karolinska Institute and Department
of Medicine, Huddinge University Hospital, Stockholm (Dr Jonsson), Sweden.
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