Aims: Most type 2 diabetes (T2D) studies have predominantly enrolled White people aged <65 years. This retrospective study evaluated outcomes for iGlarLixi (fixed-ratio combination [FRC] of insulin glargine 100 U/mL and lixisenatide) versus basal-bolus or premixed insulin in African American, Asian and Hispanic adults with T2D aged ≥65 years.
Methods: Medicare claims data were assessed from beneficiaries receiving basal insulin who newly initiated iGlarLixi, basal-bolus insulin, or premixed insulin between 7/1/2019 and 12/30/2021. Groups were propensity score matched at baseline and followed for up to 12 months. Endpoints (primary: treatment persistence; secondary: treatment adherence, hypoglycaemia event rates, healthcare resource utilisation) were assessed using multivariable regression.
Results: Treatment persistence was higher for iGlarLixi versus basal-bolus or premixed insulin in the overall population (26.9%, 7.6%, 18.9%; adjusted p < 0.0001) and numerically higher in all ethnic subgroups. Treatment adherence was numerically higher for iGlarLixi versus basal-bolus or premixed insulin in the overall population (28.0%, 8.0%, 19.0%) and in all subgroups. Hypoglycaemia event rates were numerically lower for iGlarLixi versus basal-bolus insulin or premixed insulin in the overall population (2.5, 3.8, 7.5/100 person-years' follow-up) and in all subgroups except Asians receiving basal-bolus insulin. All-cause and diabetes-related hospitalisation and emergency department visit event rates were lower with iGlarLixi versus basal-bolus insulin or premixed insulin in the overall population, and in all subgroups except for hospitalisations in Hispanics.
Conclusion: FRC therapies such as iGlarLixi represent an appropriate treatment option when intensifying basal insulin therapy in ethnic minority older adults with T2D.
Keywords: ethnicity; iGlarLixi; older adult; treatment persistence; type 2 diabetes.
© 2024 The Author(s). Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.