Litcius/Paper detail

Socioeconomic Factors Associated With Glycemic Measurement and Poor HbA1c Control in People With Type 2 Diabetes: The Global DISCOVER Study

Marília Brito Gomes, Fengming Tang, Hungta Chen, Javier Cid‐Ruzafa, Peter Fenici, Kamlesh Khunti, Wolfgang Rathmann, М. В. Шестакова, Filip Surmont, Hirotaka Watada, Jesús Medina, Iichiro Shimomura, Gabriela Luporini Saraiva, Andrew Cooper, Antonio Nicolucci

2022Frontiers in Endocrinology34 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

DISCOVER is a 3-year observational study program of 15,983 people with type 2 diabetes initiating second-line glucose-lowering therapy in 38 countries. We investigated the association between socioeconomic status and both the availability of a baseline glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) measurement and poor glycemic control (HbA1c level ≥ 9.0%) in participants enrolled in DISCOVER. Factors associated with a lack of baseline HbA1c measurement or an HbA1c level ≥ 9.0% were assessed using three-level hierarchical logistic models. Overall, 19.1% of participants did not have a baseline HbA1c measurement recorded. Lower-middle country income (vs. high) and primary/no formal education (vs. university education) were independently associated with a reduced likelihood of having a baseline HbA1c measurement (odds ratio [95% confidence interval]: 0.11 [0.03-0.49] and 0.81 [0.66-0.98], respectively. Of the participants with an available HbA1c measurement, 26.9% had an HbA1c level ≥ 9.0%; 68.7% of these individuals were from lower- or upper-middle-income countries. Factors associated with an increased likelihood of poor glycemic control included low country income, treatment at a site with public and/or governmental funding (vs. private funding) and having public or no health insurance (vs. private). A substantial proportion of DISCOVER participants did not have an HbA1c measurement; more than one-quarter of these participants had poorly controlled type 2 diabetes. Both individual- and country-level socioeconomic factors are associated with the quality of care regarding glycemic control. Awareness of these factors could help improve the management of patients with type 2 diabetes.

Topics & Concepts

Socioeconomic statusGlycemicMedicineGlycated hemoglobinOdds ratioConfidence intervalObservational studyType 2 diabetesDemographyOddsEnvironmental healthGerontologyLogistic regressionDiabetes mellitusInternal medicinePopulationEndocrinologySociologyDiabetes Management and EducationDiabetes, Cardiovascular Risks, and LipoproteinsDiabetes Management and Research