OBJECTIVE: We compared health care spending and utilization associated with semaglutide relative to bariatric surgery in patients with obesity and type 2 diabetes (T2D).
METHODS: Using MarketScan insurance claims of patients with BMI ≥ 35 and T2D from 2016 to 2021, we examined associations between choice of semaglutide, sleeve gastrectomy, or gastric bypass; 3-year health care spending (out-of-pocket [OOP] and total); and clinical outcomes (ED visits, hospital admissions, and major adverse cardiovascular events [MACE]). Analyses were adjusted using generalized linear models, inverse probability weighting, and instrumental variables.
RESULTS: Among 6748 patients (2797 semaglutide, 2300 sleeve gastrectomy, 1651 gastric bypass), bariatric surgery patients had higher BMI and more comorbidities. In IPTW-adjusted analysis, semaglutide was associated with the highest 3-year OOP costs ($7752 vs. $5980 [sleeve gastrectomy] vs. $6591 [gastric bypass], p < 0.001), but total spending was not statistically different across the groups. Relative to semaglutide, the gastric bypass group showed higher observed ED visits (hazard ratio relative to semaglutide [95% CI]: 1.36 [1.28-1.45]) and inpatient admissions (1.25 [1.13-1.37]) and fewer MACE (0.71 [0.59-0.88]). Sleeve gastrectomy was associated with fewer long-term admissions (0.79 [0.72-0.86]) and MACE (0.79 [0.66-0.93]).
CONCLUSIONS: For patients with T2D and obesity, compared with semaglutide, bariatric surgery is associated with lower OOP spending and similar total spending at 3 years, as well as lower long-term MACE rates.