Real-World Prevalence of Type 2 Diabetes Remission in a U.S. Insured Population Using a Large Administrative Claims Database.

Q3 Medicine
Natalie E Sheils, Megan S Jarvis, Lauren R Bangerter, David A Asch, Callahan N Clark
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Abstract

Objective: A 2021 international consensus statement defined type 2 diabetes remission as A1C <6.5% measured at least 3 months after cessation of glucose-lowering therapy. We aimed to investigate whether retrospective claims-based data can assess remission based on this definition, whether three increasingly strict alternative definitions affect the prevalence of remission and characteristics of remission cohorts, and how cohorts with and without sufficient data to assess for remission differ.

Research design and methods: We used de-identified administrative claims from commercially insured and Medicare Advantage members, enriched with laboratory values, to assess diabetes remission. We used alternative glycemic, temporal, and pharmacologic criteria to assess the sensitivity of remission definitions to changes in claims-based logic.

Results: Among 524,076 adults with type 2 diabetes, 185,285 (35.4%) had insufficient additional laboratory and/or enrollment data to assess for remission. While more likely to be younger, these individuals had similar initial A1C values and geographical distribution as the 338,791 (64.6%) assessed for remission. Of those assessed for remission, 10,694 (3.2%) met the 2021 consensus statement definition. The proportion of individuals meeting the three alternative definitions ranged from 0.8 to 2.3%. Across all criteria, those meeting the remission definition were more likely to be female, had a lower initially observed A1C, and had a higher prevalence of bariatric surgery.

Conclusion: This study demonstrates the feasibility of laboratory-value enriched claims-based assessments of type 2 diabetes remission. Establishing stable claims-based markers of remission can enable population assessments of diabetes remission and evaluate the association between remission and clinical outcomes.

Abstract Image

使用大型行政索赔数据库的美国参保人群中2型糖尿病缓解的真实患病率。
目的:2021年国际共识声明将2型糖尿病缓解定义为A1C。研究设计和方法:我们使用来自商业保险和医疗保险优惠会员的去识别行政索赔,并丰富了实验室值,以评估糖尿病缓解。我们使用替代的血糖、时间和药理学标准来评估缓解定义对基于索赔的逻辑变化的敏感性。结果:在524,076名成人2型糖尿病患者中,185,285名(35.4%)没有足够的额外实验室和/或入组数据来评估缓解。虽然更可能是年轻人,但这些个体的初始A1C值和地理分布与评估缓解的338,791(64.6%)相似。在评估缓解的患者中,10694例(3.2%)符合2021年共识声明定义。符合这三种不同定义的个人比例在0.8%到2.3%之间。在所有标准中,符合缓解定义的患者更有可能是女性,最初观察到的A1C较低,并且减肥手术的患病率较高。结论:本研究证明了实验室价值丰富的基于索赔的2型糖尿病缓解评估的可行性。建立稳定的基于声称的缓解标记可以使糖尿病缓解的人群评估和评估缓解与临床结果之间的关系。
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来源期刊
Diabetes Spectrum
Diabetes Spectrum Medicine-Internal Medicine
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
62
期刊介绍: The mission of Diabetes Spectrum: From Research to Practice is to assist health care professionals in the development of strategies to individualize treatment and diabetes self-management education for improved quality of life and diabetes control. These goals are achieved by presenting review as well as original, peer-reviewed articles on topics in clinical diabetes management, professional and patient education, nutrition, behavioral science and counseling, educational program development, and advocacy. In each issue, the FROM RESEARCH TO PRACTICE section explores, in depth, a diabetes care topic and provides practical application of current research findings.
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