| Literature DB >> 29596402 |
Kai McKeever Bullard, Catherine C Cowie, Sarah E Lessem, Sharon H Saydah, Andy Menke, Linda S Geiss, Trevor J Orchard, Deborah B Rolka, Giuseppina Imperatore.
Abstract
Currently 23 million U.S. adults have been diagnosed with diabetes (1). The two most common forms of diabetes are type 1 and type 2. Type 1 diabetes results from the autoimmune destruction of the pancreas's beta cells, which produce insulin. Persons with type 1 diabetes require insulin for survival; insulin may be given as a daily shot or continuously with an insulin pump (2). Type 2 diabetes is mainly caused by a combination of insulin resistance and relative insulin deficiency (3). A small proportion of diabetes cases might be types other than type 1 or type 2, such as maturity-onset diabetes of the young or latent autoimmune diabetes in adults (3). Although the majority of prevalent cases of type 1 and type 2 diabetes are in adults, national data on the prevalence of type 1 and type 2 in the U.S. adult population are sparse, in part because of the previous difficulty in classifying diabetes by type in surveys (2,4,5). In 2016, supplemental questions to help distinguish diabetes type were added to the National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) (6). This study used NHIS data from 2016 to estimate the prevalence of diagnosed diabetes among adults by primary type. Overall, based on self-reported type and current insulin use, 0.55% of U.S. adults had diagnosed type 1 diabetes, representing 1.3 million adults; 8.6% had diagnosed type 2 diabetes, representing 21.0 million adults. Of all diagnosed cases, 5.8% were type 1 diabetes, and 90.9% were type 2 diabetes; the remaining 3.3% of cases were other types of diabetes. Understanding the prevalence of diagnosed diabetes by type is important for monitoring trends, planning public health responses, assessing the burden of disease for education and management programs, and prioritizing national plans for future type-specific health services.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29596402 PMCID: PMC5877361 DOI: 10.15585/mmwr.mm6712a2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep ISSN: 0149-2195 Impact factor: 17.586
Crude prevalence* of diagnosed diabetes among adults by diabetes type† and selected characteristics — National Health Interview Survey, United States, 2016
| Characteristic | Diabetes type | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Type 1 | Type 2 | Other type | |
| % (95% CI)§ | % (95% CI)§ | % (95% CI)§ | |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |||
| 18–29 | 0.45 (0.27–0.75) | 0.66 (0.38–1.13) | —¶ |
| 30–44 | 0.50 (0.35–0.73) | 3.29 (2.75–3.93) | 0.27 (0.16–0.47) |
| 45–64 | 0.59 (0.44–0.78) | 11.03 (10.24–11.88) | 0.44 (0.30–0.65) |
| ≥65 | 0.65 (0.48–0.88) | 19.62 (18.54–20.74) | 0.35 (0.23–0.54) |
|
| |||
| Men | 0.64 (0.51–0.82) | 8.86 (8.30–9.45) | 0.23 (0.15–0.36) |
| Women | 0.46 (0.37–0.58) | 8.32 (7.79–8.88) | 0.38 (0.27–0.53) |
|
| |||
| White, non-Hispanic | 0.67 (0.55–0.82) | 7.99 (7.54–8.45) | 0.29 (0.21–0.39) |
| Black, non-Hispanic | 0.45 (0.26–0.78) | 11.52 (10.35–12.80) | 0.45 (0.24–0.86) |
| Asian, non-Hispanic | —¶ | 6.89 (5.24–9.03) | —¶ |
| Hispanic | 0.22 (0.12–0.40) | 9.07 (7.91–10.38) | —¶ |
|
| |||
| <High school | 0.83 (0.56–1.24) | 14.20 (12.88–15.64) | 0.56 (0.32–0.98) |
| High school | 0.58 (0.40–0.84) | 9.99 (9.18–10.86) | 0.29 (0.17–0.47) |
| >High school | 0.48 (0.39–0.61) | 6.89 (6.47–7.34) | 0.27 (0.19–0.38) |
Abbreviation: CI = confidence interval.
* Overall crude prevalence of diagnosed diabetes = 9.44% (95% CI = 9.01–9.88).
† Type 1 diabetes was defined as self-report of type 1 diabetes and current insulin use. Respondents who self-reported other diabetes types were classified as having “other type” diabetes. All remaining cases were classified as type 2 diabetes.
§ Estimates are weighted percentages and 95% CIs. CIs were based on a logit transformation and might be asymmetric about the point estimate.
¶ Estimate might be unreliable because of large relative standard error (>30%); data not shown.