萨摩亚成年人糖尿病相关症状、血糖控制和健康相关生活质量之间的关系

Anna C. Rivara, A. Pomer, A. Wetzel, S. Viali, T. Naseri, M. Reupena, E. Kershaw, S. McGarvey, N. Hawley
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摘要

目的萨摩亚2型糖尿病的患病率在过去30年中大幅上升。识别糖尿病患者的常见症状可能有助于指导高危人群寻求早期评估、诊断和治疗。此外,识别糖尿病经历与健康相关的生活质量之间的关联有助于了解在这种情况下患糖尿病的生活体验。在这里,我们首次描述了萨摩亚糖尿病和糖尿病前期成年队列中的糖尿病相关症状,并描述了症状存在与性别、血糖控制(HbA1c≥8.0%)和健康相关生活质量(HRQL)之间的关系。我们还评估了在调整其他因素后,报告的症状是否与患糖尿病的几率增加独立相关。方法对123名萨摩亚成年参与者进行分析,这些参与者是从Soifua Manuia研究的观察性队列中选择性抽样的,他们患有糖尿病前期或糖尿病。参与者完成了一系列人体测量、生化和问卷调查,包括2017-2019年间的修订糖尿病症状清单(DSC-R)问卷。使用独立样本T检验、Mann-Whitney U检验和关联卡方检验评估性别、糖尿病状态(糖尿病前期与糖尿病)、血糖控制(HbA1c<或≥8.0%)和HRQL的症状存在差异。在控制其他因素的情况下,使用多变量逻辑回归来评估哪些症状与患糖尿病的几率增加有关。结果在一小部分萨摩亚成年人样本中,我们观察到糖尿病前期和糖尿病患者的症状负担很高,并且据报道,糖尿病症状对健康相关生活质量的影响存在性别差异。我们确定了三种特定症状——尿频、思维困难和胸痛——在这种情况下可能是糖尿病的有用指标。讨论在糖尿病前期和糖尿病患者中观察到症状的高患病率。建议出现任何测量症状的个人寻求早期评估,并参与糖尿病自我护理行为,以防止糖尿病相关并发症和/或在疾病早期发展为糖尿病。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Associations between diabetes-related symptoms, glycemic control, and health-related quality of life in adult Samoans
Aim The prevalence of Type 2 diabetes in Samoa has increased substantially over the last 30 years. Identifying common symptoms in those living with diabetes may be instrumental in directing those at risk to seek early evaluation, diagnosis, and treatment. Additionally, identifying associations between diabetes experiences and health-related quality of life is useful for understanding the lived experience of having diabetes in this setting. Here we present the first description of diabetes-related symptoms in an adult cohort of Samoans with diabetes and prediabetes and describe associations between symptom presence and sex, glycemic control (HbA1c ≥ 8.0%), and health-related quality of life (HRQL). We also assessed whether reported symptoms were independently associated, when adjusting for other factors, with increased odds of having diabetes. METHODS Analyses were conducted on n = 123 adult Samoan participants selectively sampled from the observational cohort Soifua Manuia study, and who were living with either prediabetes or diabetes. Participants completed a series of anthropometric, biochemical, and questionnaire measures including the Revised Diabetes Symptoms Checklist (DSC-R) questionnaire between 2017-2019. Differences in symptom presence by sex, diabetes status (prediabetes vs. diabetes), glycemic control (HbA1c < or ≥ 8.0%), and HRQL were assessed using Independent Sample T-tests, Mann Whitney U tests and Chi-square tests of association. Multivariate logistic regression was used to assess which symptoms, when controlling for other factors, were associated with increased odds of having diabetes. RESULTS In a small sample of adult Samoans, we observed high symptom burdens among those with prediabetes and diabetes, and sex differences in the reported impact of diabetes symptoms on health-related quality of life. We identified three specific symptoms – frequent urination, difficulty thinking clearly, and chest/heart pains – that may be useful indicators of diabetes in this setting. DISCUSSION A high prevalence of symptoms was observed among those with prediabetes and among those with diabetes. It is recommended that individuals experiencing any of the measured symptoms seek early evaluation and engage in diabetes self-care behaviors to prevent diabetes-related complications and/or progression to diabetes among those in the early stages of the disease.
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