Anderson Barbara J, Laffel Lori M, Domenger Catherine, Danne Thomas, Phillip Moshe, Mazza Carmen, Hanas Ragnar, Waldron Sheridan, Beck Roy W, Calvi-Gries Francoise, Mathieu Chantal
Baylor College of Medicine/Texas Children's Hospital, Houston, TX
Joslin Diabetes Center, Boston, MA.
Diabetes Care. 2017 Aug;40(8):1002-1009. doi: 10.2337/dc16-1990. Epub 2017 May 25.
Our objective was to characterize diabetes-specific health-related quality of life (D-HRQOL) in a global sample of youth and young adults with type 1 diabetes (T1D) and to identify the main factors associated with quality of life.
The TEENs study was an international, cross-sectional study of youth, 8-25 years of age, with T1D. Participants ( = 5,887) were seen in clinical sites in 20 countries across 5 continents enrolled for 3 predetermined age groups: 8-12, 13-18, and 19-25 years of age. To assess D-HRQOL, participants completed the PedsQL Diabetes Module 3.0 and were interviewed about family-related factors. Specifics about treatment regimen and self-management behaviors were collected from medical records.
Across all age groups, females reported significantly lower D-HRQOL than did males. The 19-25-year age group reported the lowest D-HRQOL. Multivariate linear regression analyses revealed that D-HRQOL was significantly related to HbA; the lower the HbA, the better the D-HRQOL. Three diabetes-management behaviors were significantly related to better D-HRQOL: advanced methods used to measure food intake; more frequent daily blood glucose monitoring; and more days per week that youth had ≥30 min of physical activity.
In all three age groups, the lower the HbA, the better the D-HRQOL, underscoring the strong association between better D-HRQOL and optimal glycemic control in a global sample of youth and young adults. Three diabetes-management behaviors were also related to optimal glycemic control, which represent potentially modifiable factors for clinical interventions to improve D-HRQOL as well as glycemic control.
我们的目的是在全球1型糖尿病(T1D)青少年和青年样本中描述糖尿病特异性健康相关生活质量(D-HRQOL),并确定与生活质量相关的主要因素。
青少年研究是一项针对8至25岁T1D青少年的国际横断面研究。参与者(n = 5887)来自五大洲20个国家的临床机构,分为3个预定年龄组:8至12岁、13至18岁和19至25岁。为评估D-HRQOL,参与者完成了儿童生活质量量表糖尿病模块3.0,并接受了关于家庭相关因素的访谈。从医疗记录中收集了治疗方案和自我管理行为的具体信息。
在所有年龄组中,女性报告的D-HRQOL显著低于男性。19至25岁年龄组报告的D-HRQOL最低。多变量线性回归分析显示,D-HRQOL与糖化血红蛋白(HbA)显著相关;HbA越低,D-HRQOL越好。三种糖尿病管理行为与更好的D-HRQOL显著相关:用于测量食物摄入量的先进方法;更频繁的每日血糖监测;以及青少年每周进行≥30分钟体育活动的天数更多。
在所有三个年龄组中,HbA越低,D-HRQOL越好,这突出了在全球青少年和青年样本中,更好的D-HRQOL与最佳血糖控制之间的紧密关联。三种糖尿病管理行为也与最佳血糖控制相关,这代表了临床干预中潜在可改变的因素,以改善D-HRQOL以及血糖控制。