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The burden of diabetes-associated multiple long-term conditions on years of life spent and lost

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posted on 2024-12-03, 17:36 authored by Edward GreggEdward Gregg, Adrian Pratt, Alex Owens, Emma Barron, Rupert Dunbar-Rees, Eirion T Slade, Nasrin Hafezparast, Chirag Bakhai, Paul Chappell, Victoria Cornelius, Desmond G Johnston, Jacqueline Mathews, Jason Pickles, Ellie Bragan Turner, Gary Wainman, Kate Roberts, Kamlesh Khunti, Jonathan Valabhji
Diabetes mellitus is a central driver of multiple long-term conditions (MLTCs), but population-based studies have not clearly characterized the burden across the life course. We estimated the age of onset, years of life spent and loss associated with diabetes-related MLTCs among 46 million English adults. We found that morbidity patterns extend beyond classic diabetes complications and accelerate the onset of severe MLTCs by 20 years earlier in life in women and 15 years earlier in men. By the age of 50 years, one-third of those with diabetes have at least three conditions, spend >20 years with them and die 11 years earlier than the general population. Each additional condition at the age of 50 years is associated with four fewer years of life. Hypertension, depression, cancer and coronary heart disease contribute heavily to MLTCs in older age and create the greatest community-level burden on years spent (813 to 3,908 years per 1,000 individuals) and lost (900 to 1,417 years per 1,000 individuals). However, in younger adulthood, depression, severe mental illness, learning disabilities, alcohol dependence and asthma have larger roles, and when they occur, all except alcohol dependence were associated with long periods of life spent (11–14 years) and all except asthma associated with many years of life lost (11–15 years). These findings provide a baseline for population monitoring and underscore the need to prioritize effective prevention and management approaches.

Funding

Science Foundation Ireland (22/RP/10091)

Wolfson Royal Society Fellowship

North West London National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Applied Research Collaboration

Imperial NIHR Biomedical Research Center (BRC)

NIHR Applied Research Collaboration East Midlands (ARC EM)

NIHR Global Research Center for MLTCs

MLTC Cross-NIHR Collaboration

NIHR Leicester BRC

CW+, the official charity of Chelsea and Westminster Hospital NHS Foundation Trust

History

Data Availability Statement

As part of the support made available for local services and NHS, the Population and Person Insights dashboard, accessible by NHS organizations, presents aggregated data according to NHS administrative footprints, including at the national level (https://apps.model.nhs.uk/report/PaPi). The source data used in this evaluation and to derive the National Segmentation Dataset are from the NHS NCDR. The NCDR is a pseudonymized patient-level data repository managed by the NHS England (NHSE) Data Services team. The authors cannot provide direct access to the data, as this would circumvent NHS England’s research data access procedures. More information about the NCDR and how to contact NHS England Data Services is available at https://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/ukgwa/20231101051610/https://data.england.nhs.uk/ncdr/database/ (ref. 42).

Comments

The original article is available at https://www.nature.com/

Published Citation

Gregg EW. et al. The burden of diabetes-associated multiple long-term conditions on years of life spent and lost. Nat Med. 2024;30(10):2830-2837.

Publication Date

1 August 2024

PubMed ID

39090411

Department/Unit

  • School of Population Health

Research Area

  • Population Health and Health Services
  • Endocrinology

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Version

  • Published Version (Version of Record)