PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

Longitudinal change in health-related quality of life in people with prevalent and incident type 2 diabetes compared to diabetes-free controls.

  • Michaela Schunk,
  • Peter Reitmeir,
  • Ina-Maria Rückert-Eheberg,
  • Teresa Tamayo,
  • Sabine Schipf,
  • Christa Meisinger,
  • Annette Peters,
  • Christa Scheidt-Nave,
  • Ute Ellert,
  • Saskia Hartwig,
  • Alexander Kluttig,
  • Henry Völzke,
  • Rolf Holle

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0176895
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 5
p. e0176895

Abstract

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The objective of this analysis is to compare people with prevalent type 2 diabetes, incident type 2 diabetes and without diabetes with respect to longitudinal change in health-related quality of life (HRQOL) when adjusting for baseline determinants of HRQOL.Primary baseline and follow-up data from three regional and one national population-based cohort studies in Germany were pooled for analysis. HRQOL was measured using physical and mental health summary scores (PCS and MCS) from the German version of the Short Form Health Survey with 36 or 12 items. Mean score change per observation year was compared between the three groups (prevalent diabetes, incident diabetes, no diabetes) based on linear regression models.The analysis included pooled data from 5367 people aged 45-74 years at baseline. Of these, 85.5% reported no diabetes at baseline and follow-up, 6.3% reported diabetes at both baseline and follow-up (prevalent diabetes), and 8.2% reported diabetes only at follow-up (incident diabetes). Over a mean observation period of 8.7 years, annual decline in HRQOL scores is pronounced at 0.27-0.32 (PCS) and 0.34-0.38 (MCS) in the group with prevalent diabetes compared with people without diabetes. Those with incident diabetes showed intermediate values but did not differ significantly from people without diabetes after adjustment for covariates in the full model.Compared with data from cross-sectional analysis, the HRQOL loss associated with prevalent diabetes appears to be much larger than previously assumed.