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Diabetes reduces years lived without disability and overall life expectancy: Study

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The estimated loss of life expectancy associated with diabetes at age 50 years was 3.2 years for men and 3.1 years for women, as compared to their counterparts without diabetes

New research published in Diabetologia (the journal of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes [EASD]) shows that men and women with diabetes (both types) face not only reduced overall life expectancy, but also higher numbers of years living with disability compared to those people without diabetes. The research is by Associate Professor Dianna Magliano and Dr Lili Huo, Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Institute, Melbourne, Australia, and colleagues.

In this study, the authors used data from the Australian Diabetes, Obesity and Lifestyle study to determine diabetes rates in Australia, and disability data was used from the 2012 Australian Survey of Disability, Ageing and Carers (SDAC). Mortality data were available by linking the National Diabetes Service Scheme to National Death Index for diabetes and from standard national mortality datasets for the general population. The authors then produced estimates on both life expectancy (LE) and disability-free life expectancy (DFLE)

The estimated LE and DFLE at age 50 years were 30.2 and 12.7 years, respectively, for men with diabetes, and the estimates were 33.9 and 13.1 years, respectively, for women with diabetes. The estimated loss of LE associated with diabetes at age 50 years was 3.2 years for men and 3.1 years for women, as compared to their counterparts without diabetes.

The corresponding estimated loss of DFLE was 8.2 years for men and 9.1 years for women. Women with diabetes spent a greater number of absolute years and a greater proportion of their life with disability from age 50 years (61 per cent) as compared to men with diabetes (58 per cent), women without diabetes (40 per cent) and men without diabetes (38 per cent). At age 50 years, the estimated years lived with disability accounted for about 60 per cent of total LE for those with diabetes and around 40 per cent of total LE for those without diabetes.

The gains in LE and DFLE across the whole population (including people with and without diabetes) at age 50 years after hypothetically eliminating diagnosed diabetes would be 0.6 years and 1.8 years. The authors say that a number of factors are likely to be responsible for the loss of DFLE in people with diabetes. These include blood vessel complications that can cause eyesight deterioration and also movement problems and amputations, and also factors not traditionally connected to diabetes, such as decline in brain functioning as people age.

They say, “The striking loss of DFLE in diabetes reported in this study is likely to raise concern about the burden of diabetes in future decades, indicating a need to respond by implementing intervention and prevention of disability.”

They add, “Evidence has shown that the loss of muscle mass and strength in patients with diabetes may potentially be improved with insulin sensitisers. In 2012, the Look AHEAD trial found that intensive lifestyle intervention with a focus on weight loss and physical activity reduced the incidence of physical disability by half among overweight or obese adults with diabetes. Nonetheless, further research is still needed to explore other mechanisms (for example; related to obesity or lack of physical activity) which lead to disability in diabetes. This will help inform strategies to prevention and control disability in those with diabetes.”

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