Department of Non-communicable Disease Epidemiology, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
Royal National Institute of Blind People, London, UK.
BMJ Open. 2017 Feb 28;7(2):e014444. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-014444.
To describe trends in the incidence and prevalence of diabetic retinopathy (DR) in the UK by diabetes type, age, sex, ethnicity, deprivation, region and calendar year.
Cohort study using the Clinical Practice Research Datalink (CPRD).
UK primary care.
7.7 million patients ≥12 contributing to the CPRD from 2004 to 2014.
Age-standardised prevalence and incidence of diabetes, DR and severe DR (requiring photocoagulation) by calendar year and population subgroup. Relative risk of developing DR and severe DR by population subgroup.
The prevalence of DR was 48.4% in the population type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) (14 846/30 657) and 28.3% (95 807/338 390) in the population with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). Prevalence of DR remained stable in people with T2DM and decreased in people with T1DM. Screening for DR increased over time for patients with T2DM and remained static for patients with T1DM Incidence of DR increased in parallel with the incidence of T2DM in both diabetic populations. Among patients with T2DM, relative risk of DR varied significantly by region, was increased for older age groups and in men compared with women, with risk of severe DR increased in South Asian groups and more deprived groups. Relative risk of DR for patients with T1DM varied by age and region, but not by gender, ethnic group or deprivation.
This is the largest study to date examining the burden of DR in the UK. Regional disparities in incidence may relate to differences in screening delivery and disease ascertainment. Evidence that deprivation and ethnicity are associated with a higher risk of severe DR highlights a significant potential health inequality. Findings from this study will have implications for professionals working in the diabetes and sight loss sectors, particularly to inform approaches for diagnosis of retinopathy and campaigning to better tackle the disease for at risk groups.
通过糖尿病类型、年龄、性别、种族、贫困程度、地区和日历年来描述英国糖尿病性视网膜病变(DR)的发病率和患病率趋势。
使用临床实践研究数据链(CPRD)的队列研究。
英国初级保健。
2004 年至 2014 年期间,有 770 万≥12 岁的患者为 CPRD 做出贡献。
按日历年度和人群亚组划分的糖尿病、DR 和需要光凝治疗的严重 DR(DR)的年龄标准化患病率和发病率。按人群亚组计算发生 DR 和严重 DR 的相对风险。
1 型糖尿病(T1DM)人群中 DR 的患病率为 48.4%(14846/30657),2 型糖尿病(T2DM)人群中 DR 的患病率为 28.3%(95807/338390)。T2DM 患者的 DR 患病率保持稳定,而 T1DM 患者的 DR 患病率则下降。随着时间的推移,T2DM 患者的 DR 筛查率增加,而 T1DM 患者的筛查率则保持不变。DR 的发病率与 T2DM 的发病率平行增加。在 T2DM 患者中,DR 的相对风险因地区而异,年龄较大的年龄组和男性的风险高于女性,南亚群体和贫困程度较高的群体的严重 DR 风险增加。T1DM 患者的 DR 相对风险因年龄和地区而异,但与性别、种族或贫困程度无关。
这是迄今为止对英国 DR 负担进行的最大规模研究。发病率的区域差异可能与筛查提供和疾病确定的差异有关。证据表明,贫困和种族与严重 DR 的风险增加有关,这突出了一个重大的潜在健康不平等问题。本研究的结果将对从事糖尿病和视力丧失领域的专业人员产生影响,特别是为诊断视网膜病变提供信息,并为高危人群开展运动以更好地治疗该疾病。