Shannon L Baltrusaitis1, Ted Grabarczyk2. 1. Department of Veterans Affairs Eastern Kansas Health Care System, 2200 SW Gage Blvd, Topeka, KS 66622, United States. Electronic address: Shannon.baltrusaitis@va.gov. 2. Department of Veterans Affairs Eastern Kansas Health Care System, 2200 SW Gage Blvd, Topeka, KS 66622, United States. Electronic address: Ted.Grabarczyk@va.gov.
Abstract
AIMS: To investigate the relationship of average level of glycemic control and fractures in elderly Veterans. METHODS: Retrospective cohort of Veterans (age ≥65) grouped as follows: no diabetes, HbA1c ≤7.0% [≤53 mmol/mol], HbA1c 7.1-8.0% [54-64 mmol/mol], HbA1c 8.1-9.0% [65-75 mmol/mol], and HbA1c >9% [>75 mmol/mol]. Data from January 1, 2010 - January 1, 2017 from the Veteran's Affairs Corporate Data Warehouse was analyzed using Chi-square and Cox regression analysis. RESULTS: 3434 fractures occurred from the 36,744 Veterans included. The fracture incidences were 14.4, 11.7, 7.9, 8.2, and 10.8 events per 1000 patient years and the hazard ratios were 1.233 (1.130-1.345); p < 0.0001, 0.718 (0.626-0.825); p < 0.0001, 0.682 (0.545-0.854); p = 0.0009, and 0.887 (0.633-1.245); p = 0.4915 in the no diabetes, HA1c ≤7% [≤53 mmol/mol], 7.1-8% [54-64 mmol/mol], 8.1-9% [65-75 mmol/mol], and >9% [>75 mmol/mol] groups after accounting for covariates in the final model. CONCLUSION: In elderly Veterans with type 2 diabetes the average HbA1c 7.1-8.0% [54-64 mmol/mol], and 8.1-9% [65-75 mmol/mol] have the lowest fracture incidence and those without diabetes showing the highest incidence rate; however, due to the overall low rate of fracture, the absolute difference in incidence of fracture was very small at 2-5 per 1000 patient years. Beyond limiting the risk factors identified these results don't support altering diabetes treatment goals to reduce fracture risk. Published by Elsevier B.V.
AIMS: To investigate the relationship of average level of glycemic control and fractures in elderly Veterans. METHODS: Retrospective cohort of Veterans (age ≥65) grouped as follows: no diabetes, HbA1c ≤7.0% [≤53 mmol/mol], HbA1c 7.1-8.0% [54-64 mmol/mol], HbA1c 8.1-9.0% [65-75 mmol/mol], and HbA1c >9% [>75 mmol/mol]. Data from January 1, 2010 - January 1, 2017 from the Veteran's Affairs Corporate Data Warehouse was analyzed using Chi-square and Cox regression analysis. RESULTS: 3434 fractures occurred from the 36,744 Veterans included. The fracture incidences were 14.4, 11.7, 7.9, 8.2, and 10.8 events per 1000 patient years and the hazard ratios were 1.233 (1.130-1.345); p < 0.0001, 0.718 (0.626-0.825); p < 0.0001, 0.682 (0.545-0.854); p = 0.0009, and 0.887 (0.633-1.245); p = 0.4915 in the no diabetes, HA1c ≤7% [≤53 mmol/mol], 7.1-8% [54-64 mmol/mol], 8.1-9% [65-75 mmol/mol], and >9% [>75 mmol/mol] groups after accounting for covariates in the final model. CONCLUSION: In elderly Veterans with type 2 diabetes the average HbA1c 7.1-8.0% [54-64 mmol/mol], and 8.1-9% [65-75 mmol/mol] have the lowest fracture incidence and those without diabetes showing the highest incidence rate; however, due to the overall low rate of fracture, the absolute difference in incidence of fracture was very small at 2-5 per 1000 patient years. Beyond limiting the risk factors identified these results don't support altering diabetes treatment goals to reduce fracture risk. Published by Elsevier B.V.
Entities:
Keywords:
Diabetes; Elderly; Fracture; HbA1c; Hip fracture; Veterans
Authors: Alexander J Eckert; Julia K Mader; Marcus Altmeier; Steffen Mühldorfer; Anton Gillessen; Dhayana Dallmeier; Viral N Shah; Christoph Heyer; Bettina Hartmann; Reinhard W Holl Journal: J Diabetes Complications Date: 2020-06-27 Impact factor: 2.852