Institute for Health Policy, Colombo, Sri Lanka
Institute for Health Policy, Colombo, Sri Lanka.
BMJ Open Diabetes Res Care. 2023 Feb;11(1). doi: 10.1136/bmjdrc-2022-003160.
This study's objective was to produce robust, comparable estimates of the prevalence of diabetes and pre-diabetes in the Sri Lankan adult population, where previous studies suggest the highest prevalence in South Asia.
We used data on 6661 adults from the nationally representative 2018/2019 first wave of the Sri Lanka Health and Ageing Study (SLHAS). We classified glycemic status based on previous diabetes diagnosis, and either fasting plasma glucose (FPG), or FPG and 2-hour plasma glucose (2-h PG). We estimated crude and age-standardized prevalence of pre-diabetes and diabetes and by major individual characteristics weighting the data to account for study design and subject participation.
Crude prevalence of diabetes in adults was 23.0% (95% CI 21.2% to 24.7%) using both 2-h PG and FPG, and age-standardized prevalence was 21.8% (95% CI 20.1% to 23.5%). Using only FPG, prevalence was 18.5% (95% CI 7.1% to 19.8%). Previously diagnosed prevalence was 14.3% (95% CI 13.1% to 15.5%) of all adults. The prevalence of pre-diabetes was 30.5% (95% CI 28.2% to 32.7%). Diabetes prevalence increased with age until ages ≥70 years and was more prevalent in female, urban, more affluent, and Muslim adults. Diabetes and pre-diabetes prevalence increased with body mass index (BMI) but was as high as 21% and 29%, respectively, in those of normal weight.
Study limitations included using only a single visit to assess diabetes, relying on self-reported fasting times, and unavailability of glycated hemoglobin for most participants. Our results indicate that Sri Lanka has a very high diabetes prevalence, significantly higher than previous estimates of 8%-15% and higher than current global estimates for any other Asian country. Our results have implications for other populations of South Asian origin, and the high prevalence of diabetes and dysglycemia at normal body weight indicates the need for further research to understand the underlying drivers.
本研究旨在提供斯里兰卡成年人群中糖尿病和糖尿病前期患病率的可靠、可比估计值,因为先前的研究表明该地区的患病率在南亚地区最高。
我们使用了来自全国代表性的 2018/2019 年斯里兰卡健康与老龄化研究(SLHAS)第一波的 6661 名成年人的数据。我们根据以前的糖尿病诊断以及空腹血浆葡萄糖(FPG)或 FPG 和 2 小时血浆葡萄糖(2-h PG)来分类血糖状态。我们根据主要个体特征估计了糖尿病前期和糖尿病的粗患病率和年龄标准化患病率,并对数据进行加权以考虑研究设计和对象参与情况。
使用 2-h PG 和 FPG 时,成年人的糖尿病粗患病率为 23.0%(95%可信区间为 21.2%至 24.7%),年龄标准化患病率为 21.8%(95%可信区间为 20.1%至 23.5%)。仅使用 FPG 时,患病率为 18.5%(95%可信区间为 7.1%至 19.8%)。所有成年人中,先前诊断的患病率为 14.3%(95%可信区间为 13.1%至 15.5%)。糖尿病前期的患病率为 30.5%(95%可信区间为 28.2%至 32.7%)。糖尿病患病率随年龄增长而增加,直至≥70 岁,且在女性、城市、较富裕和穆斯林成年人中更为常见。糖尿病和糖尿病前期的患病率随体重指数(BMI)增加而增加,但在体重正常的人群中,分别高达 21%和 29%。
研究的局限性包括仅使用单次就诊来评估糖尿病,依赖于自我报告的禁食时间,以及大多数参与者无法获得糖化血红蛋白。我们的结果表明,斯里兰卡的糖尿病患病率非常高,明显高于之前估计的 8%-15%,也高于目前全球其他亚洲国家的估计值。我们的结果对其他南亚裔人群有影响,并且正常体重下糖尿病和血糖异常的高患病率表明需要进一步研究以了解潜在的驱动因素。