Effect of diabetes mellitus on giant cell arteritis.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To determine if Type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM) is protective against giant
cell arteritis (GCA) and to estimate the incidence of GCA diagnosis from Medicare
claims. METHODS: Medicare 5% claims files from 1991 to 2011 were used to identify
beneficiaries diagnosed with DM, but not GCA, within a 3-year ascertainment period.
Propensity score matching was used to define a control group of nondiabetics with
comparable demographic covariates. Competing risk regression was then used to assess
the impact of DM diagnosis on GCA diagnosis. To allow for a 3-year ascertainment period,
the analysis sample was limited to beneficiaries older than 68 years at baseline.
RESULTS: A total of 151,041 beneficiaries diagnosed with DM were matched to an equal
number of controls. Mean study follow-up was 67.75 months. GCA was diagnosed among
1116 beneficiaries with DM (0.73%) vs 465 (0.30%) controls. The risk of receiving
a GCA diagnosis among patients with DM was increased by 100% (subhazard ratio, 2.00;
95% confidence interval, 1.78-2.25). The annual incidence of GCA diagnosis among claims
for US Medicare beneficiaries older than 68 years old was 93 in 100,000. CONCLUSIONS:
A DM diagnosis is not protective against a GCA diagnosis in the Medicare population.
Our data suggest that a DM diagnosis increases the risk of GCA diagnosis within 5.7
years for Medicare beneficiaries older than 68 years.
Type
Journal articleSubject
Diabetes MellitusFemale
Giant Cell Arteritis
Humans
Male
Medicare
Retrospective Studies
United States
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/14807Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1097/WNO.0000000000000218Publication Info
Abel, Anne S; Yashkin, Arseniy P; Sloan, Frank A; & Lee, Michael S (2015). Effect of diabetes mellitus on giant cell arteritis. J Neuroophthalmol, 35(2). pp. 134-138. 10.1097/WNO.0000000000000218. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/14807.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Frank A. Sloan
J. Alexander McMahon Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Health Policy and Management
Professor Sloan is interested in studying the subjects of health policy and the economics
of aging, hospitals, health, pharmaceuticals, and substance abuse. He has received
funding from numerous research grants that he earned for studies of which he was the
principal investigator. His most recent grants were awarded by the Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation, the Center for Disease Control, the Pew Charitable Trust, and the National
Institute on Aging. Titles of his projects include, “Why Mature S
Arseniy Yashkin
Research Scientist, Senior
I am primarily a health outcomes researcher who specializes in cancers and chronic
age-related diseases, especially Alzheimer’s disease and type II diabetes mellitus. However,
I also write in epidemiology, demography, health economics and genetics. I am a specialist
in the analysis of administrative big health data. My main contributions to scholarship
can be summarized across three focus areas: health outcomes research, epidemiolog
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