Diabetes foot complications and standardized mortality rate in type 2 diabetes

Author:

Stedman Mike1,Robinson Adam2,Dunn George3,Meza‐Torres Bernado4,Gibson J. Martin25,Reeves Neil D.6,Jude Edward B.5,Feher Michael7,Rayman Gerry8,Whyte Martin B.910ORCID,Edmonds Michael9,Heald Adrian H.25ORCID

Affiliation:

1. RES Consortium UK

2. Department of Diabetes and Endocrinology Salford Royal Foundation Trust Salford UK

3. East Cheshire Trust Macclesfield UK

4. Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences University of Oxford Oxford UK

5. Department of Medicine University of Manchester Manchester UK

6. Department of Life Sciences, Faculty of Science and Engineering Manchester Metropolitan University Manchester UK

7. Chelsea and Westminster Hospital London UK

8. The Ipswich Diabetes Centre and Research Unit Ipswich Hospital NHS Trust Ipswich UK

9. Diabetic Foot Clinic King's College Hospital Foundation Trust London UK

10. Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences University of Surrey Guildford UK

Abstract

AbstractAimTo quantify the impact of foot complications on mortality outcomes in people with type 2 diabetes (T2D), and how routinely measured factors might modulate that risk.Materials and MethodsData for individuals with T2D for 2010‐2020, from the Salford Integrated Care Record (Salford, UK), were extracted for laboratory and clinical data, and deaths. Annual expected deaths were taken from Office of National Statistics mortality data. An index of multiple deprivation (IMD) adjusted the standardized mortality ratio (SMR_IMD). Life years lost per death (LYLD) was estimated from the difference between expected and actual deaths.ResultsA total of 11 806 T2D patients were included, with 5583 new diagnoses and 3921 deaths during 2010‐2020. The number of expected deaths was 2135; after IMD adjustment, there were 2595 expected deaths. Therefore, excess deaths numbered 1326 (SMR_IMD 1.51). No foot complications were evident in n = 9857. This group had an SMR_IMD of 1.13 and 2.74 LYLD. In total, 2979 patients had any foot complication recorded. In this group, the SMD_IMR was 2.29; of these, 2555 (75%) had only one foot complication. Patients with a foot complication showed little difference in percentage HbA1c more than 58 mmol/mol. In multivariate analysis, for those with a foot complication and an albumin‐to‐creatinine ratio of more than 3 mg/mmol, the odds ratio (OR) for death was 1.93, and for an estimated glomerular filtration rate of less than 60 mL/min/1.73m2, the OR for death was 1.92.ConclusionsPatients with T2D but without a foot complication have an SMR_IMD that is only slightly higher than that of the general population. Those diagnosed with a foot complication have a mortality risk that is double that of those without T2D.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Endocrinology,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

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