Freisinger Eva, Malyar Nasser M, Reinecke Holger, Lawall Holger
Division of Vascular Medicine, Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, University Hospital Muenster, Albert Schweitzer Campus 1, A1, 48149, Muenster, Germany.
Praxis für Herzkreislauferkrankungen und Akademie für Gefaeßkrankheiten, Ettlingen, Germany.
Cardiovasc Diabetol. 2017 Apr 4;16(1):41. doi: 10.1186/s12933-017-0524-8.
Patients with diabetes concomitant to critical limb ischemia (CLI) represent a sub-group at particular risk. Objective of this analysis is to evaluate the actual impact of diabetes on treatment, outcome, and costs in a real-world scenario in Germany.
We obtained routine-data on 15,332 patients with CLI with tissue loss from the largest German health insurance, BARMER GEK from 2009 to 2011, including a follow-up until 2013. Patient data were analyzed regarding co-diagnosis with diabetes with respect to risk profiles, treatment strategy, in-hospital and long-term outcome including costs.
Diabetic patients received less overall revascularizations in Rutherford grades 5 and 6 (Rutherford grade 5: 45.0 vs. 55.5%; Rutherford grade 6: 46.5 vs. 51.8; p < 0.001) and less vascular surgery (Rutherford grade 5: 13.4 vs. 23.4; Rutherford grade 6: 19.7 vs. 29.6; p < 0.001), however more often endovascular revascularization in Rutherford grade 6 (31.0 vs. 28.1; p = 0.004) compared to non-diabetic patients. Diabetes was associated with a higher observed ratio of infections (35.3 vs. 23.5% Rutherford grade 5; 44.3 vs. 27.4% Rutherford grade 6; p < 0.001) and in-hospital amputations (13.0 vs. 7.3% Rutherford grade 5; 47.5 vs. 36.7% Ruth6; p < 0.001). Diabetes further increased the risk for amputation during follow-up [Rutherford grade 5: HR 1.51 (1.38-1.67); Rutherford grade 6: HR 1.33 (1.25-1.41); p < 0.001], but not for death.
Diabetes increases markedly the risk of amputation attended by higher costs in CLI patients with tissue loss (OR 1.67 at Rutherford 5, OR 1.53 at Rutherford 6; p < 0.001), but is associated with lower revascularizations. However, in Rutherford grades 5 and 6, concomitant diabetes does not further worsen the overall poor survival.
合并严重肢体缺血(CLI)的糖尿病患者是一个特别危险的亚组。本分析的目的是评估在德国的实际临床环境中,糖尿病对治疗、结局和成本的实际影响。
我们从德国最大的健康保险公司BARMER GEK获取了2009年至2011年15332例伴有组织缺损的CLI患者的常规数据,随访至2013年。分析患者数据中糖尿病合并诊断的风险特征、治疗策略、住院和长期结局,包括成本。
糖尿病患者在卢瑟福分级5级和6级中接受的总体血运重建较少(卢瑟福分级5级:45.0%对55.5%;卢瑟福分级6级:46.5%对51.8%;p<0.001),血管手术也较少(卢瑟福分级5级:13.4对23.4;卢瑟福分级6级:19.7对29.6;p<0.001),然而在卢瑟福分级6级中,与非糖尿病患者相比,血管腔内血运重建更频繁(31.0%对28.1%;p=0.004)。糖尿病与更高的感染发生率相关(卢瑟福分级5级:35.3%对23.5%;卢瑟福分级6级:;44.3%对27.4%;p<0.001)和住院截肢率(卢瑟福分级5级:13.0%对7.3%;卢瑟福分级6级:47.5%对36.7%;p<0.001)。糖尿病进一步增加了随访期间截肢的风险[卢瑟福分级5级:HR 1.51(1.38 - 1.67);卢瑟福分级6级:HR 1.33(1.25 - 1.41);p<0.001],但与死亡风险无关。
糖尿病显著增加了伴有组织缺损的CLI患者截肢的风险,且成本更高(卢瑟福分级时5级OR为1.67,6级OR为1.53;p<0.001),但与血运重建率较低相关。然而,在卢瑟福分级5级和6级中,合并糖尿病并不会进一步恶化总体较差的生存率。