Skipping Diabetes Meds Ups
Risk of Hospitalization
By Megan Rauscher
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Type 2 diabetic
patients who take their oral medications
only part of the time have an increased
risk of being hospitalized within a one-year
period, the results of a new study indicate.
Dr. David P. Nau, along with Dr. Denys T.
Lau, of the University of Michigan in Ann
Arbor, used claims data from a managed care
organization to examine the link between
nonadherence to diabetes drugs and subsequent
hospitalization in 900 adult type 2 diabetics.
Over a 12-month period, 28.9 percent of
patients were nonadherent to the antihyperglycemic
regimen, they report in Diabetes Care.
According to the data, the risk of hospitalization
in 2001 increased by more than twofold in
type 2 diabetics who were nonadherent to
their oral diabetes medications the year
before.
"It isn't just the patients who completely
stop their medications who are at higher
risk of hospitalization," Nau told
Reuters Health, "since the patients
in our study who obtained less than 80 percent
of their scheduled doses had a hospitalization
rate approximately twice that of patients
who were nearly perfect in their adherence."
This increased risk of hospitalization
remained strong even after considering the
effect of other illnesses and the patients'
adherence to high blood pressure and cholesterol-lowering
medications.
Nonadherence to high blood pressure and
cholesterol-lowering medications, seen in
18.8 percent and 26.9 percent of study subjects,
respectively, was not significantly associated
with an increased risk of hospitalization.
"If strategies can be developed to
identify and intervene with patients, there
may be substantial benefits to patients
as well as the payers for health care services,"
the researchers conclude in their report.
Nau suggests that for some diabetic patients,
"referral to a certified diabetes educator
might be quite useful."
SOURCE: Diabetes Care September 2004.