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Change in health status (EQ-5D) over 5 years among individuals with and without type 2 diabetes mellitus in the SHIELD longitudinal study

Abstract

Background

Health-related quality of life studies among adults with type 2 diabetes mellitus, using the EQ-5D, have been short term and have not assessed change over years. This study assessed the change in health status and health-related quality of life over 5 years among individuals with and without diabetes.

Methods

Respondents to the US S tudy to H elp I mprove E arly evaluation and management of risk factors L eading to D iabetes (SHIELD) completed the EuroQol-5D (EQ-5D) at baseline (2004) and 5 years later (2009). Visual analog scale (VAS) score and health index score were computed at baseline and year 5, and the change over 5 years was measured for individuals with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) and those without diabetes, and T2DM adults with and without diabetic complications. Linear regression models were used to determine change in EQ-5D score, controlling for age, gender, race, education, household income, and body mass index (BMI).

Results

There was significantly greater decline in the EQ-5D index score in the T2DM group (-0.031 [SD 0.158]), compared with those without diabetes (-0.016 [0.141], p = 0.001). Compared with respondents without diabetes, those with T2DM had a larger reduction in EQ-5D index score, after controlling for demographics (p = 0.001). EQ-5D VAS score declined over 5 years for both groups: -1.42 (18.1) for the T2DM group, and -0.63 (15.8) for the group without diabetes, but the between-group difference was not significant either before (p = 0.09) or after (p = 0.12), controlling for demographics. T2DM respondents with diabetic complications had a greater decline in EQ-5D scores than T2DM respondents without complications (p < 0.05).

Conclusion

Over a 5-year period, health status of respondents with T2DM declined significantly compared with those with no diabetes, indicating that the burden of the disease has a long-term detrimental impact. This decline in health status is likely to impact utility scores (fewer quality-adjusted life years) for economic evaluations.

Background

During the past decade, there has been a dramatic rise in diabetes[1]. In the United States, there are 23.5 million adults 20 years or older with diabetes[2]. Worldwide, an estimated 366 million people had diabetes in 2011, with the number of people with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) increasing in every country[3]. Complications from diabetes include blindness, kidney disease, macrovascular disease, and neuropathy; diabetes is the seventh leading cause of death in the US[4].

Individuals with T2DM are known to have lower health-related quality of life (HRQOL) and more depressive symptomatology than those without diabetes[58]. Significant reductions in health status among diabetes patients compared with other chronic disease populations have been demonstrated using generic HRQOL instruments[5]. T2DM has been shown to be frequently associated with adverse psychological effects, particularly depression[5, 6]. Among Michigan patients with T2DM, the number of diabetes complications was correlated with lower HRQOL scores[8]. In a population-based study of adults with and without T2DM, investigators found EQ-5D index scores and visual analog scores were significantly lower for respondents with T2DM and those with 3−5 risk factors for T2DM than for those with 0−2 risk factors[9]. The majority of these HRQOL studies in diabetes has focused on the current health state of patients and has not assessed change in health state over long periods of time, except for clinical trials that are short term.

HRQOL measures are used in the evaluation of healthcare interventions, including cost-effectiveness analyses[10]. For this purpose, quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) should be calculated using preferences from the population as a whole. Studies have suggested that patients’ values for their own health state affect their decisions concerning treatment and its health outcomes[1113]. The EQ-5D is one HRQOL measure that has been calibrated with preferences from the whole population. Assessments of HRQOL using generic instruments like the EQ-5D allow for comparisons with other chronic diseases as well as comparisons with healthy populations to estimate the incremental burden of diabetes.

The objective of this present study was to assess the change in health status and HRQOL over a 5-year period among adults with and without T2DM, using data from the Study to Help Improve Early evaluation and management of risk factors Leading to Diabetes (SHIELD). Also, the change in health status and HRQOL among T2DM adults with diabetic complications was assessed to determine whether complications led to additional disease burden impact. Unlike clinical trials, this study evaluated change in HRQOL over 5 years among adults being treated in routine clinical practice. Until now, the EQ-5D has mostly been used in short-term studies of less than 2 years[1416]. Evaluating change in EQ-5D scores over 5 years will elucidate whether health status and HRQOL would decline over a long period time, possibly indicating that longer duration with the burden of T2DM may lead to continued decline in HRQOL rather than adjusting to the disease and stabilization of HRQOL.

Methods

This study is a longitudinal analysis of EQ-5D data collected in 2004 and 2009 among SHIELD respondents with T2DM and those with no diabetes. SHIELD is a 5-year, survey-based study conducted to better understand patterns of health status, health behavior, and knowledge and attitudes of people living with diabetes and those with varying levels of cardiometabolic risk.

SHIELD survey

SHIELD included an initial screening phase to identify cases of interest in the general population (e.g., diabetes mellitus) and a baseline questionnaire to follow up identified cases and collect data regarding health status, health knowledge and attitudes, and current behaviors and treatments. Subsequently, annual follow-up surveys were administered for 5 years. A detailed description of the SHIELD methodology has been published previously[17, 18].

In brief, the screening survey was mailed in April 2004 to a stratified random sample of 200,000 US households, representative of the US population for geographic residence, household size and income, and age of head of household[19], identified by the Taylor Nelson Sofres National Family Opinion (TNS NFO) panel (Greenwich, CT). All TNS NFO surveys were voluntary, and no special incentives were provided. A response rate of 64% was obtained for the screening survey. The SHIELD study was approved by the Quorum Review Board.

A comprehensive baseline survey was mailed in September–October 2004 to a representative sample of individuals 18 years of age or older (n = 22,001) who were identified in the screening survey as having self-reported type 1 diabetes mellitus or T2DM, no diabetes, or being at risk for diabetes. Each respondent group was balanced to be representative of that segment of the population for age, gender, geographic region, household size, and income for the US population, and then a random sample from each group was selected and sent the baseline survey. A response rate of 72% was obtained for the baseline survey. The 2009 annual follow-up survey (response rate of 70%) repeated the EQ-5D instrument for comparison with the baseline EQ-5D responses.

Study measures

Respondents were classified as having T2DM based on their self-report of having been told by a doctor, nurse, or other healthcare professional that they had T2DM. Respondents who reported a diagnosis of type 1 diabetes mellitus or unspecified diabetes were excluded from the analysis. Respondents who did not report a diagnosis of T2DM, type 1 diabetes, or unspecified diabetes at baseline were included in the “no diabetes” group.

The EQ-5D was used as a measure of respondents’ HRQOL and utility values. The EQ-5D includes a descriptive profile and a single index value for health status[20, 21]. The visual analog scale (VAS) records the respondents’ self-rating for their current HRQOL on a graduated (0−100) scale, with higher scores for higher HRQOL[22]. The descriptive system is composed of 5 dimensions of health: mobility, self-care, usual activities, pain/discomfort, and anxiety/depression. The VAS provides a direct valuation of the respondent’s current state of health, whereas the descriptive system can be converted into an index score representing a von Neumann-Morgenstern utility value for current health[20]. The health states from each of the 5 dimensions are converted into a weighted health state index by applying scores from the EQ-5D preference weights elicited from general population samples. These weights lie on a scale on which full health has a value of 1 and dead a value of 0. For this study, US population weights were used to convert to an EQ-5D index score[23].

Diabetes complications reported at the annual follow-up surveys included ever being diagnosed with retinopathy, neuropathy, and nephropathy. Respondents were classified as having retinopathy if they reported a diagnosis of eye disease, blindness, or retinopathy. Neuropathy was defined as reporting a diagnosis of nerve problems of the hands or feet involving pain, tingling, or numbness, foot ulcers, or amputation. Nephropathy was defined as a reported diagnosis of chronic kidney disease, dialysis, end-stage kidney disease, kidney transplant, or protein in the urine.

Statistical analysis

EQ-5D VAS score and health index score were computed at baseline and 5 years later, and the change over 5 years measured for respondents with and without T2DM. Comparisons between respondents with and without reported T2DM and comparisons between T2DM respondents with and without diabetic complications were conducted using chi-square test for categorical variables and t-tests for continuous variables. Ordinary linear regression model was used to evaluate change in EQ-5D score by diabetes status (T2DM vs. no diabetes), controlling for age, gender, education, household income, and body mass index (BMI) as reported at baseline. Statistical significance was set a priori as p < 0.05.

Results

There were 1,741 respondents with T2DM and 4,543 respondents without diabetes who completed the 2004 and 2009 EQ-5D questionnaires and were included in the analysis. T2DM respondents were significantly older (mean age: 60.6 vs. 56.1 years), had higher BMI (33.7 vs. 29.8 kg/m2), and a greater percentage had low education (35.1% vs. 28.5% with high school degree or less) and low household income (51.9% vs. 41.8% with annual income < $40,000), compared with respondents without diabetes (p < 0.001 for each comparison) (Table1). At baseline (2004), 66.6% of the T2DM respondents received oral antidiabetic medications alone, 8.7% received insulin plus oral antidiabetic agents, 5.5% received insulin alone, and 19.2% received no diabetes medications. In 2009, 51.1% of the T2DM respondents received oral antidiabetic medications alone, 12.5% received insulin plus oral antidiabetic agents, 9.6% received insulin alone, and 26.8% received no diabetes medications.

Table 1 Characteristics of SHIELD respondents with and without type 2 diabetes mellitus who completed the 2004 and 2009 EQ-5D questionnaires, n = 6,284

Cross-sectionally, mean EQ-5D scores for 2004 and 2009 were significantly lower among T2DM respondents compared with respondents without diabetes (p < 0.0001 for both index and VAS scores) (Table2). Longitudinally, there was a significantly greater decline in EQ-5D index score in the T2DM group (mean decline −0.031) compared with respondents without diabetes (−0.016) over the 5-year period (p = 0.001) (Table2). EQ-5D VAS score declined over 5 years for both groups, with a change of −1.4 for T2DM respondents and −0.6 for respondents without diabetes. The difference between the T2DM and No diabetes groups in change in EQ-5D VAS scores was not statistically significant (p = 0.09).

Table 2 Mean scores and mean change in scores for EQ-5D among SHIELD respondents with and without type 2 diabetes mellitus

Multivariate regression adjusted for demographic variables, including age, gender, race, education, income, and BMI. Compared with respondents without diabetes, T2DM respondents had a larger reduction in EQ-5D index score, after controlling for demographics (p = 0.001) (Table3). After controlling for demographic variables, change in EQ-5D VAS score did not differ between T2DM respondents and respondents without diabetes (p = 0.12). Age and gender were significantly associated with change in EQ-5D score for both the index and VAS, after controlling for the other covariates.

Table 3 Multivariate linear regression for change in EQ-5D scores among adults with and without type 2 diabetes

Approximately 9.8% of T2DM respondents reported a diagnosis of retinopathy, 25.0% reported a diagnosis of neuropathy, and 3.3% reported a diagnosis of nephropathy. The decline in EQ-5D index score was significantly greater among T2DM respondents who reported retinopathy, compared with T2DM respondents without retinopathy (p = 0.017) (Table4). Similarly, the decline in EQ-5D index score was significantly greater among T2DM respondents who reported prevalent neuropathy, compared with T2DM respondents without neuropathy (p < 0.0001). T2DM respondents with reported nephropathy had a decline in EQ-5D index score that was not significantly different from the decline among T2DM respondents without nephropathy (p = 0.43). For change in EQ-5D VAS score, T2DM respondents who reported retinopathy had a similar decline as T2DM respondents without retinopathy (p = 0.88). Although T2DM respondents who reported neuropathy had twice the decline in EQ-5D VAS score as T2DM respondents without neuropathy, the difference was not statistically significant (p = 0.43). Moreover, T2DM respondents who reported nephropathy had a significantly greater decline in EQ-5D VAS score compared with T2DM respondents without nephropathy (p = 0.01).

Table 4 Mean change in EQ-5D scores over 5 years among adults with type 2 diabetes mellitus with and without diabetic complications

Discussion

Over a 5-year period in the present study, health status of respondents with T2DM declined significantly, compared with adults with no diabetes, indicating that the burden of disease has a long-term detrimental impact on the quality of life of individuals living with T2DM. The decline in EQ-5D index score over 5 years among T2DM respondents was twice the decline among respondents without diabetes (p = 0.001), and the decline in VAS score was 2.2 times greater, albeit not statistically significant. The greater decline in health status among T2DM respondents remained even after adjusting for baseline differences between groups. The absence of significantly greater decline in VAS score may be due to the VAS being a single question on overall health currently. As a generic measure of health status, the VAS may be more influenced by other major health events such as myocardial infarction, stroke, and depression than the index score. The significantly greater decline in EQ-5D index score in the T2DM group compared with respondents without diabetes is likely to impact utility scores for economic evaluations. QALYs are used as indicators of effectiveness or health outcome in economic evaluations[24]. Cost-effectiveness studies are required to help clinicians and healthcare decision-makers in determining the impact of antidiabetic medications on both patient outcomes and societal costs. Understanding patient preferences (index score) for health outcomes is important for economic evaluations of new therapies, as well as for understanding patient behavior and adherence to diabetes therapy regimens. Thus in the present study, adults with T2DM would have fewer QALYs gained compared with adults without diabetes.

The greater decline in EQ-5D index score over 5 years for T2DM respondents with reported retinopathy and neuropathy is likely to impact utility scores in economic evaluations among adults with T2DM. A mailed questionnaire to individuals with T2DM in Norway found that the EQ-5D index score was 0.85 for those without diabetic complications and 0.73 for those with complications[25]. A clinical trial of intensive blood glucose control versus standard treatment in China showed that patients with microvascular complications reported significantly lower EQ-5D index scores than those without complications; however, there was no significant difference in HRQOL after 5 years in both groups[26]. In the present study, the decline in EQ-5D scores was greater among T2DM respondents with diabetic complications. From these findings, the presence of diabetic complications should be accounted for in the evaluation of the economic burden of T2DM.

The baseline EQ-5D scores in the present study were similar to those in other studies. Grandy and colleagues[9] reported cross-sectional EQ-5D scores for the T2DM respondents from SHIELD in 2004 (0.78 for index and 66.8 for VAS), which were similar to those in the present study of T2DM respondents who completed both the 2004 and 2009 SHIELD surveys (index = 0.80, VAS = 69.0 in 2004). The EQ-5D has been widely used in studies assessing HRQOL in diabetes, in particular, clinical trials evaluating different diabetes treatments or disease management programs[14, 2630]. A multi-country European study found significantly lower EQ-5D VAS scores for T2DM patients who reported hypoglycemic symptoms compared with patients not reporting symptoms[28]. A simulation model of diabetes disease progression showed that healthier patients with T2DM enjoy more life years, QALYs, and more life years free of complications[31]. Recent studies have demonstrated the construct, convergent and discriminant validity, test-retest reliability, and responsiveness of the EQ-5D in T2DM[32]. In a review of studies in T2DM that used the EQ-5D, EQ-5D index scores ranged from 0.20 for severe diabetic peripheral neuropathic pain to 0.88 for the general population with good HbA1c levels[32]. Pooled mean EQ-5D index scores were calculated for 6 subgroups: general population 0.67 (95% CI: 0.59−0.75), no complications 0.76 (0.68−0.83), microvascular complications 0.73 (0.57−0.89), macrovascular complications 0.73 (0.57−0.88), diabetic peripheral neuropathic pain 0.45 (0.39−0.51), and retinopathy 0.57 (0.46−0.69)[32]. Together with the present study findings of a decline in ED-5D index score over 5 years, this would potentially indicate that the T2DM respondents declined in health and possibly had diabetic complications that would negatively impact their QALYs.

EQ-5D scores for the respondents without diabetes were high; index scores were 0.84 in 2004 and 0.82 in 2009. However, these scores were similar to adults in the US general population where the mean EQ-5D score was 0.871 for the total population, 0.884 for men and 0.860 for women, and 0.872 for whites and 0.854 for blacks[33]. Jia and Lubetkin[33] used the 2000-2003 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey data to determine that the mean EQ-5D score was 0.825 for US adults in the general population with less than a high school education and 0.859 for those with a high school degree; 28.5% of the respondents without diabetes in the present study had a high school degree or less. Thus, the EQ-5D scores in the present study are in alignment with the general US population.

The present study provides evidence of the impact of T2DM on HRQOL over 5 years in a large sample using a standardized, validated measure so that norm-based results are provided. However, the study has some limitations. The diagnosis of diabetes and diabetic complications were self-reported and could not be validated with laboratory tests or medical record reviews. However, this bias is similar between the groups compared in this study. Household panels, like the TNS NFO panel, tend to under-represent the very wealthy and very poor segments of the population and do not include military or institutionalized individuals. Glucose control, such as HbA1c level, was not collected in the SHIELD surveys, so its impact on the decline in HRQOL cannot be assessed in this study. It is possible that the detrimental impact of T2DM over the 5 years may in part be due to poor glucose control. The proportion of T2DM respondents receiving no diabetic medications increased over time from 19.2% to 26.8%. It is possible that some respondents had improved their glycemic control through diet and exercise thus lowering their need for anti-diabetic medications; however, SHIELD did not collect data to address this supposition.

Another factor limiting the interpretation of the data is that minimally important differences (MIDs) for the EQ-5D have not been identified for T2DM patients treated in clinical practice (rather than clinical trial populations). The MID of 0.07 for the EQ-5D index score has been suggested, although the MID was not derived within samples of patients with T2DM[3436]. Neither the T2DM respondents nor respondents without diabetes met the MID criterion for the change in EQ-5D index score.

In conclusion, health status of respondents with T2DM declined significantly over a 5- year period compared with respondents with no diabetes, indicating that the burden of disease has a long-term detrimental impact on HRQOL for adults living with T2DM. The significantly greater decline in EQ-5D index score in the T2DM group compared with respondents without diabetes, as well as the decline among T2DM respondents with diabetic complications, is likely to impact utility scores (fewer QALYs) for economic evaluations.

Abbreviations

BMI:

Body mass index

EQ-5D:

EuroQol – 5 dimensions

HRQOL:

Health-related quality of life

MID:

Minimally important difference

QALYs:

Quality-adjusted life years

SHIELD:

S tudy to H elp I mprove E arly evaluation and management of risk factors L eading to D iabetes

T2DM:

Type 2 diabetes mellitus

TNS NFO:

Taylor Nelson Sofres National Family Opinion

VAS:

Visual analog scale.

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Acknowledgments

Members of the SHIELD Study Group are: Harold Bays, MD, Louisville Metabolic and Atherosclerosis Research Center, Louisville, KY; Debbra D. Bazata, RD, CDE, St. Luke’s Primary Care South, Overland Park, KS; James R. Gavin III, MD, PhD, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA; Andrew J. Green, MD, Midwestern Endocrinology, Overland Park, KS; Sandra J. Lewis, MD, Northwest Cardiovascular Institute, Portland, OR; Michael L. Reed, PhD, Vedanta Research, Chapel Hill, NC; and Helena W. Rodbard, MD, Endocrine and Metabolic Associates, Rockville, MD. Tina Fanning of Vedanta Research, Chapel Hill, NC, also contributed to this report, performing data collection and analysis. Anne Lewis of Clermont Consulting Group, Alexandria, VA, contributed to this report, providing project management. Karen McFadden of AstraZeneca LP, Wilmington, DE, provided editorial support for this report. The sponsor had no role in the study design, data collection, analysis, interpretation of data, writing the manuscript, or the decision to publish except through the author, Susan Grandy who is an employee of AstraZeneca LP.

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Correspondence to Kathleen M Fox.

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Competing interests

This research was funded by AstraZeneca LP. SG is an employee and stock holder of AstraZeneca LP. KMF received research funds from AstraZeneca LP.

Authors’ contributions

SG provided substantial contribution to the conception and design of the study and interpretation of the data, reviewed and revised the manuscript critically for important intellectual content, and approved the final version of the manuscript. KMF provided substantial contribution to the design of the analysis, oversaw the analysis, provided the data interpretation, wrote the manuscript, and approved the final version of the manuscript.

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Grandy, S., Fox, K.M. & the SHIELD Study Group. Change in health status (EQ-5D) over 5 years among individuals with and without type 2 diabetes mellitus in the SHIELD longitudinal study. Health Qual Life Outcomes 10, 99 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1186/1477-7525-10-99

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