1Department of Nutrition, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC.
2Department of Biostatistics, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC.
Diabetes Care. 2022 Jan 1;45(1):108-118. doi: 10.2337/dc21-0496.
To estimate difference in population-level glycemic control and the emergence of diabetes complications given a theoretical scenario in which non-White youth and young adults (YYA) with type 1 diabetes (T1D) receive and follow an equivalent distribution of diabetes treatment regimens as non-Hispanic White YYA.
Longitudinal data from YYA diagnosed 2002-2005 in the SEARCH for Diabetes in Youth Study were analyzed. Based on self-reported race/ethnicity, YYA were classified as non-White race or Hispanic ethnicity (non-White subgroup) versus non-Hispanic White race (White subgroup). In the White versus non-White subgroups, the propensity score models estimated treatment regimens, including patterns of insulin modality, self-monitored glucose frequency, and continuous glucose monitoring use. An analysis based on policy evaluation techniques in reinforcement learning estimated the effect of each treatment regimen on mean hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) and the prevalence of diabetes complications for non-White YYA.
The study included 978 YYA. The sample was 47.5% female and 77.5% non-Hispanic White, with a mean age of 12.8 ± 2.4 years at diagnosis. The estimated population mean of longitudinal average HbA1c over visits was 9.2% and 8.2% for the non-White and White subgroup, respectively (difference of 0.9%). Within the non-White subgroup, mean HbA1c across visits was estimated to decrease by 0.33% (95% CI -0.45, -0.21) if these YYA received the distribution of diabetes treatment regimens of the White subgroup, explaining ∼35% of the estimated difference between the two subgroups. The non-White subgroup was also estimated to have a lower risk of developing diabetic retinopathy, diabetic kidney disease, and peripheral neuropathy with the White youth treatment regimen distribution (P < 0.05), although the low proportion of YYA who developed complications limited statistical power for risk estimations.
Mathematically modeling an equalized distribution of T1D self-management tools and technology accounted for part of but not all disparities in glycemic control between non-White and White YYA, underscoring the complexity of race and ethnicity-based health inequity.
在假设非裔美国青年和年轻成年人(YYA)与非裔美国青年和年轻成年人(YYA)接受并遵循相同的糖尿病治疗方案的情况下,估计人群血糖控制水平的差异和糖尿病并发症的出现。
分析了 2002-2005 年在青少年糖尿病研究(SEARCH for Diabetes in Youth Study)中诊断为 1 型糖尿病(T1D)的 YYA 的纵向数据。根据自我报告的种族/民族,将 YYA 分为非裔美国人种或西班牙裔(非白人群组)与非西班牙裔白人(白人亚组)。在白人亚组与非白人群组之间,使用倾向评分模型估计治疗方案,包括胰岛素模式、自我监测血糖频率和连续血糖监测的使用模式。基于强化学习中的政策评估技术的分析,估计了每种治疗方案对非白人群组的平均血红蛋白 A1c(HbA1c)和糖尿病并发症患病率的影响。
研究纳入了 978 名 YYA。样本中 47.5%为女性,77.5%为非西班牙裔白人,诊断时的平均年龄为 12.8±2.4 岁。估计的纵向平均 HbA1c 人群平均值在就诊期间分别为 9.2%和 8.2%,非白人群组和白人亚组分别为 0.9%(差异为 0.9%)。在非白人群组中,如果这些 YYA 接受了白人亚组的糖尿病治疗方案分布,在就诊期间估计 HbA1c 平均下降 0.33%(95%CI -0.45,-0.21),解释了两个亚组之间估计差异的约 35%。非白人群组在接受白人青年治疗方案分布时,也被估计为发生糖尿病视网膜病变、糖尿病肾病和周围神经病变的风险较低(P<0.05),尽管发生并发症的 YYA 比例较低,限制了风险估计的统计能力。
数学建模表明,T1D 自我管理工具和技术的均等分布解释了非白人和白人 YYA 之间血糖控制差异的一部分,但不是全部,突显了种族和民族健康不平等的复杂性。