PLoS ONE (Nov 2010)

Influence of comorbidities on therapeutic progression of diabetes treatment in Australian veterans: a cohort study.

  • Agnes I Vitry,
  • Elizabeth E Roughead,
  • Adrian K Preiss,
  • Philip Ryan,
  • Emmae N Ramsay,
  • Andrew L Gilbert,
  • Gillian E Caughey,
  • Sepehr Shakib,
  • Adrian Esterman,
  • Ying Zhang,
  • Robyn A McDermott

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0014024
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 11
p. e14024

Abstract

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BackgroundThis study assessed whether the number of comorbid conditions unrelated to diabetes was associated with a delay in therapeutic progression of diabetes treatment in Australian veterans.Methodology/principal findingsA retrospective cohort study was undertaken using data from the Australian Department of Veterans' Affairs (DVA) claims database between July 2000 and June 2008. The study included new users of metformin or sulfonylurea medicines. The outcome was the time to addition or switch to another antidiabetic treatment. The total number of comorbid conditions unrelated to diabetes was identified using the pharmaceutical-based comorbidity index, Rx-Risk-V. Competing risk regression analyses were conducted, with adjustments for a number of covariates that included age, gender, residential status, use of endocrinology service, number of hospitalisation episodes and adherence to diabetes medicines. Overall, 20,134 veterans were included in the study. At one year, 23.5% of patients with diabetes had a second medicine added or had switched to another medicine, with 41.4% progressing by 4 years. The number of unrelated comorbidities was significantly associated with the time to addition of an antidiabetic medicine or switch to insulin (subhazard ratio [SHR] 0.87 [95% CI 0.84-0.91], PConclusions/significanceIncreasing numbers of unrelated conditions decreased the likelihood of therapeutic progression in veterans with diabetes. These results have implications for the development of quality measures, clinical guidelines and the construction of models of care for management of diabetes in elderly people with comorbidities.