Collazo Ashley, Shibuya Naohiro, Prochaska John, Jupiter Daniel C
School of Public and Population Health, The University of Texas Medical Branch, 301 University Blvd, Galveston, TX, 77555, USA.
School of Podiatric Medicine, The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley, 1214 W. Schooner St. 2.108, Edinburg, TX, 78541, USA.
J Racial Ethn Health Disparities. 2025 Feb 13. doi: 10.1007/s40615-025-02301-3.
There are established regional and racial/ethnic disparities in lower limb amputation due to diabetes; risk is higher in people of African American and Hispanic origin, particularly those in South Texas. The studies exposing these disparities in the Lower Rio Grande Valley are not current and are limited in number.
We collected data from 2011 to 2016 from the United States Census Bureau, Texas Department of State Health Services (DSHS), and Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) databases. Demographic information related to gender, race, and Hispanic ethnicity was extracted from the Census Bureau, counts of minor and major amputations from DSHS, and socioeconomic data such as percent of unemployed, uninsured, and college education attainment from RWJF. Using multivariate Poisson regression, current rates of lower limb amputation secondary to diabetes in the Rio Grande Valley were analyzed, and the role of Hispanic ethnicity in county-level amputation rates was explored.
The Valley population living with diabetes had a significantly increased risk (1.334; CI 1.291, 1.378) of diabetes-related lower limb amputation compared to the rest of Texas when adjusting for the year. Similarly, Hispanic ethnicity was associated with an increased risk of amputation by a factor of 2.172 (CI 2.097, 2.248) compared to non-Hispanic ethnicity. However, when adjusting for Hispanic ethnicity, residing in the Valley is a protective factor for amputation, decreasing risk by a factor of 0.827 (CI 0.795, 0.86) compared to the rest of Texas.
While Hispanic ethnicity is associated with an increased individual risk of diabetes-related lower limb amputation in the Rio Grande Valley, residence in the Valley is simultaneously a protective factor from amputation.
糖尿病导致的下肢截肢存在既定的地区及种族/族裔差异;非裔美国人和西班牙裔人群的风险更高,尤其是南德克萨斯州的这些人群。揭示下里奥格兰德河谷地区这些差异的研究并非最新研究,且数量有限。
我们从2011年至2016年收集了来自美国人口普查局、德克萨斯州州立卫生服务部(DSHS)和罗伯特·伍德·约翰逊基金会(RWJF)数据库的数据。与性别、种族和西班牙裔族裔相关的人口统计信息从人口普查局提取,小截肢和大截肢的数量从DSHS提取,社会经济数据如失业率、未参保率和大学教育程度从RWJF提取。使用多变量泊松回归分析了里奥格兰德河谷地区糖尿病继发下肢截肢的当前发生率,并探讨了西班牙裔族裔在县级截肢率中的作用。
在对年份进行调整后,与德克萨斯州其他地区相比,居住在河谷地区的糖尿病患者发生糖尿病相关下肢截肢的风险显著增加(1.334;可信区间1.291,1.378)。同样,与非西班牙裔族裔相比,西班牙裔族裔截肢风险增加了2.172倍(可信区间2.097,2.248)。然而,在对西班牙裔族裔进行调整后,居住在河谷地区是截肢的一个保护因素,与德克萨斯州其他地区相比,风险降低了0.827倍(可信区间0.795,0.86)。
虽然在里奥格兰德河谷地区,西班牙裔族裔个体发生糖尿病相关下肢截肢的风险增加,但居住在该河谷地区同时也是预防截肢的一个保护因素。