Prevalence, Awareness, Treatment, and Control of Diabetes Among 0.98 Million Patients With Stroke/TIA in China: Insights From a Nationwide Cohort Study
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background
A comprehensive epidemiological investigation of the coexistence between diabetes and stroke/TIA in China is urged.
Methods
Data from the Chinese Stroke Center Alliance program, a nationwide multi-center registry study, were used to detect the prevalence, awareness, treatment, and control of diabetes among stroke/TIA. The distribution of diagnosed and undiagnosed diabetes and prediabetes among stroke/TIA patients was investigated, the medical care around diabetes and their respective risk predictors were analyzed, and the association of all above diabetes characteristics with in-hospital death was evaluated using multi-variable Cox regression models.
Results
Of 980 625 patients included, 308 426 (31.5%) had prediabetes, while 365 052 (37.2%) had diabetes, with nearly a third of them undiagnosed (112 969, 30.9%). Of residual aware diabetic patients, 59.0% were treated, with 27.3% controlled. Compared to Han ethnicity, Zhuang ethnicity had a lower prevalence of diabetes (37.3% vs. 35.1%) but were less aware (69.4% vs. 56.5%), treated (59.4% vs. 47.8%), and controlled (27.4% vs. 26.0%). Patients with prediabetes, diagnosed, and undiagnosed diabetes had increasingly higher risks of in-hospital death (adjusted HR [95% CI]: 1.47 [1.35–1.60]; 2.15 [1.97–2.34]; 4.20 [3.87–4.56], all p < 0.001). Unaware and untreated diabetes were independently associated with in-hospital death (adjusted HR [95% CI]: 1.99 [1.85–2.14]; 2.84 [2.63–3.07, both p < 0.001]). Compared with controlled diabetes, those with uncontrolled diabetes had a lower risk of in-hospital death (adjusted HR [95% CI]: 0.77[0.68–0.88], p < 0.001).
Conclusions
The findings indicate that over two-thirds of stroke/TIA patients are exposed to diabetes in China, causing higher in-hospital mortality, which should be screened and intervened early.
期刊介绍:
Journal of Diabetes (JDB) devotes itself to diabetes research, therapeutics, and education. It aims to involve researchers and practitioners in a dialogue between East and West via all aspects of epidemiology, etiology, pathogenesis, management, complications and prevention of diabetes, including the molecular, biochemical, and physiological aspects of diabetes. The Editorial team is international with a unique mix of Asian and Western participation.
The Editors welcome submissions in form of original research articles, images, novel case reports and correspondence, and will solicit reviews, point-counterpoint, commentaries, editorials, news highlights, and educational content.