Abstract
BackgroundIn Sweden, diabetes prevalence is increasing in spite of unchanged incidence, indicating improved survival. In recent US studies mortality in diabetic subjects has decreased over three decades, but only in men. Our aim was to study mortality over time in diabetic subjects.MethodsThe annual Swedish Living Conditions Survey from 1980 to 2004 has been record-linked to the Cause of Death Register in order to study trends in mortality risk for those reporting diabetes as a chronic illness. Survival and the relative mortality risk within 5 years of follow-up have been calculated for a random sample of men and women aged 40–84 years with (n = 3,589) and without diabetes (n = 85,685) for the period 1980 to 2004. Poisson regression models were used.ResultsThe age-adjusted mortality risk relative to non-diabetics within 5 years of follow-up for men was doubled during all periods. The relative risk for women was initially about 2.5, with a substantial drop in mortality in 1995–1999 to 1.45 although it increased to 1.90 in the last period. Using models that took into consideration the presence of heart disease, hypertension, daily smoking, and socio-economic status at the initial interview did not change the relative mortality risk. The age-adjusted 10-year observed survival rate for men with diabetes increased from 41.4% 1980–1984 to 51.5% in 1995–1999. The observed survival for women increased from 43.7% to 61.0%.ConclusionSurvival rates have improved in subjects with diabetes since the early 1980s, more so in women than in men, thereby decreasing the gap to non-diabetic women.
Highlights
In Sweden, diabetes prevalence is increasing in spite of unchanged incidence, indicating improved survival
Treatment methods for diabetes focus on improved glucose control and cardiovascular prevention
Multivariate analyses showed that the diabetics had a three- to four-fold higher mortality risk than non-diabetics (Table 2)
Summary
In Sweden, diabetes prevalence is increasing in spite of unchanged incidence, indicating improved survival. In recent US studies mortality in diabetic subjects has decreased over three decades, but only in men. Our aim was to study mortality over time in diabetic subjects. Patients with diabetes have a markedly increased mortality which arises mainly from cardiovascular disease and end-stage renal disease [1,2,3]. Treatment methods for diabetes focus on improved glucose control and cardiovascular prevention. These methods have undergone several changes during the last decades, and international guidelines have been established. There is a consensus among researchers that diabetes prevalence is increasing. The debate is rather whether this is due to an increasing age-specific prevalence due to an increase in incidence or to a longer longevity among dia-
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