Exp Clin Endocrinol Diabetes 2007; 115(8): 495-501
DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-981470
Article

© J. A. Barth Verlag in Georg Thieme Verlag KG · Stuttgart · New York

Epidemiology of Complications and Total Treatment Costs from Diagnosis of Type 2 Diabetes in Germany (ROSSO 4)

S. Martin 1 , W. Schramm 2 , B. Schneider 3 , K. Neeser 2 , C. Weber 2 , V. Lodwig 2 , L. Heinemann 4 , W. A. Scherbaum 1 , H. Kolb 1
  • 1German Diabetes Clinic, German Diabetes Centre, Leibniz Centre at the Heinrich-Heine-University Düsseldorf
  • 2Institute for Medical Informatics and Biostatistics, Basle, Switzerland
  • 3Institute of Biometry, Hannover Medical University, Hannover, Germany
  • 4Profil Institute for Metabolic Research, Neuss, Germany
Further Information

Publication History

received 21.03.2007 first decision 25.04.2007

accepted 09.05.2007

Publication Date:
12 September 2007 (online)

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Abstract

Objective: To determine the occurrence of complications and treatment costs in the first 6 years from diagnosis of Type 2 diabetes in the primary care level.

Design: The German multi-centre, retrospective epidemiological cohort study ROSSO observed patients from diagnosis in 1995-1999 until the end of 2003 or loss to follow-up.

Setting: 192 randomly contacted primary care practices and all patient records of newly diagnosed type 2 diabetes patients.

Participants: All 3,142 patients insured in a public health insurance plan.

Main Outcome Measures: Diabetes-related complications were documented from patient files. Treatment costs were attributed using the doctor's tariff, hospital DRGs and medication price lists for Germany.

Results: At diagnosis, already 22.4% of patients presented with CHD, 15.4% with CHF, 5.8% with pAOD, 3.1% with stroke and 3.9% with AMI, but less than 0.5% with documented microvascular complications. 7.4% of patients were diagnosed with prior depression and, 5.0% with polyneuropathy. Within a mean of 6.5 years of follow-up 114 patients (3.6%) died. The cumulated occurrence of AMI and stroke rose without a lag phase almost linearly from diagnosis reaching 6.7% for AMI and 7.7% for stroke. The total number of strokes was significantly higher than AMI (181 strokes vs. 109 AMI; p≤0.001). As expected, the rate of microvascular complications was low during this early disease stage but nevertheless reached 2.8 % of patients (amputation, dialysis and blindness combined). Mortality and stroke rates did not differ significantly between sexes but men suffered more frequently from AMI (4.8% men, 2.2% women; p < 0.001). Total costs of diabetes care was 1,288 € (1,610 $)for the first treatment year with diagnosed diabetes and rose to 3,845 € (4,806 $) in year seven. Costs for treating complications dominated already in the first year after diagnosis. The mean direct treatment costs amounted to 3,210 € (4,013 $) per patient and year for the first 6.5 years.

Conclusion: ROSSO is the first epidemiological cohort study examining longitudinal epidemiological data of the same patients over more than five years (up to eight years) for type 2 diabetes mellitus in primary care practices, starting from diagnosis. The rate of complications rose linearly from diagnosis without a lag phase. Stroke occurred more often than myocardial infarction, the latter more often in men. Total treatment costs were dominated by costs of treating complications from early on, suggesting a costs saving potential by early detection of diabetes as well as by secondary prevention and patient empowerment in the period following diagnosis.

References

Correspondence

Prof. Dr. S. Martin

German Diabetes Clinic

German Diabetes Centre

Leibniz Centre at the Heinrich-Heine-University Düsseldorf

Auf'm Hennekamp 65

40221 Düsseldorf

Germany

Phone: +49/211/338 22 32

Fax: +49/211/338 23 60

Email: martin@ddz.uni-duesseldorf.de