Impact of severe hypoglycaemia requiring hospitalization on mortality in people with type 1 diabetes: A national retrospective observational cohort study

Author:

Moser Othmar12ORCID,Rafferty James3,Eckstein Max L.1,Aziz Faisal2ORCID,Bain Stephen C.4ORCID,Bergenstal Richard5ORCID,Sourij Harald2ORCID,Thomas Rebecca L.4

Affiliation:

1. Division Exercise Physiology and Metabolism, Department of Sport Science University of Bayreuth Bayreuth Germany

2. Interdisciplinary Metabolic Medicine Trials Unit, Division of Endocrinology and Diabetology, Department of Internal Medicine Medical University of Graz Graz Austria

3. Health Data Research—UK, Medical School Swansea University Swansea UK

4. Diabetes Research Group, Medical School Swansea University Swansea UK

5. International Diabetes Center, HealthPartners Institute Minneapolis Minnesota USA

Abstract

AbstractAimsTo assess if the risk of all‐cause mortality increases in people with type 1 diabetes (T1D) with increasing number of severe hypoglycaemia episodes requiring hospitalization.Materials and methodsWe conducted a national retrospective observational cohort study in people with T1D (diagnosed between 2000 and 2018). Clinical, comorbidity and demographic variables were assessed for impact on mortality for people with no, one, two and three or more episodes of severe hypoglycaemia requiring hospitalization. The time to death (all‐cause mortality) from the timepoint of the last episode of severe hypoglycaemia was modelled using a parametric survival model.ResultsA total of 8224 people had a T1D diagnosis in Wales during the study period. The mortality rate (95% confidence interval [CI]) was 6.9 (6.1‐7.8) deaths/ 1000 person‐years (crude) and 15.31 (13.3‐17.63) deaths/ 1000 person‐years (age‐adjusted) for those with no occurrence of severe hypoglycaemia requiring hospitalization. For those with one episode of severe hypoglycaemia requiring hospitalization the mortality rate (95% CI) was 24.9 (21.0‐29.6; crude) and 53.8 (44.6‐64.7) deaths/ 1000 person‐years (age‐adjusted), for those with two episodes of severe hypoglycaemia requiring hospitalization it was 28.0 (23.1‐34.0; crude) and 72.8 (59.2‐89.5) deaths/ 1000 person‐years (age‐adjusted), and for those with three or more episodes of severe hypoglycaemia requiring hospitalization it was 33.5 (30.0‐37.3; crude) and 86.3 (71.7‐103.9) deaths/ 1000 person years (age‐adjusted; P < 0.001). A parametric survival model showed that having two episodes of severe hypoglycaemia requiring hospitalization was the strongest predictor for time to death (accelerated failure time coefficient 0.073 [95% CI 0.009‐0.565]), followed by having one episode of severe hypoglycaemia requiring hospitalization (0.126 [0.036‐0.438]) and age at most recent episode of severe hypoglycaemia requiring hospitalization (0.917 [0.885‐0.951]).ConclusionsThe strongest predictor for time to death was having two or more episodes of severe hypoglycaemia requiring hospitalization.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Endocrinology,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

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