Almost half of US adults have prediabetes or diabetes
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A study of data from 2011 to 2012 estimates the prevalence of diabetes among U.S. adults was 12–14% and the prevalence of prediabetes was 37–38%, indicating that about half of the U.S. adult population has either diabetes or prediabetes. The study is published in the Sept. 8 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association, and indicates that data from recent years suggests that the increasing prevalence of diabetes may be leveling off.
Diabetes cost an estimated $245 billion in 2012 due to increased use of health resources and lost productivity.
Andy Menke, PhD, of Social & Scientific Systems Inc. in Silver Spring, Md., and colleagues estimated the U.S. prevalence and trends in diabetes and undiagnosed diabetes using National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) data. The researchers included data from surveys conducted between 1988-1994 and 1999-2012; 2,781 adults from 2011-2012 were used to estimate recent prevalence and an additional 23,634 adults from 1988-2010 were used to estimate trends.
The prevalence of diabetes was defined using a previous diagnosis of diabetes or, if diabetes was not previously diagnosed, by (1) a hemoglobin A1c level of 6.5% or greater or a fasting plasma glucose (FPG) level of 126 mg/dL or greater (hemoglobin A1c or FPG definition) or (2) additionally including 2-hour plasma glucose (2-hour PG) level of 200 mg/dL or greater (hemoglobin A1c, FPG, or 2-hour PG definition). Prediabetes was defined with certain levels of these markers.
Among the findings:
- In the overall 2011-2012 population, the unadjusted prevalence was 14.3% for total diabetes, 9.% for diagnosed diabetes, 5.2% for undiagnosed diabetes, and 38% for prediabetes; among those with diabetes, 36.4% were undiagnosed.
- Compared with non-Hispanic white participants (11.3%), the prevalence of total diabetes (using the hemoglobin A1c, FPG, or 2-hour PG definition) was higher among non-Hispanic black participants (21.8%), non-Hispanic Asian participants (20.6 percent), and Hispanic participants (22.6%).
- The prevalence of prediabetes was greater than 30% in all sex and racial/ethnic categories, and generally highest among non-Hispanic white individuals and non-Hispanic black individuals.
- The percentage of cases that were undiagnosed was higher among non-Hispanic Asian participants (50.9%) and Hispanic participants (49%) than all other racial/ethnic groups.
- The prevalence of total diabetes increased from 9.8% in 1988-1994 to 10.8% in 2001-2002, to 12.4% in 2011-2012, and increased significantly in every age group, in both sexes, in every racial/ethnic group and by all education levels.
The authors note that although there was an increase in diabetes prevalence between 1988- 1994 and 2011-2012, prevalence estimates changed little between 2007-2008 and 2011-2012. "This plateauing of diabetes prevalence is consistent with obesity trends in the United States showing a leveling off around the same period."
"Although obesity and type 2 diabetes remain major clinical and public health problems in the United States, the current data provide a glimmer of hope," write William H. Herman, M.D., M.P.H., and Amy E. Rothberg, M.D., Ph.D., of the University of Michigan Health System, Ann Arbor, in an accompanying editorial."The shift in cultural attitudes toward obesity, the American Medical Association's (AMA's) recognition of obesity as a disease, and the increasing focus on societal interventions to address food policy and the built environment are beginning to address some of the broad environmental forces that have contributed to the epidemic of obesity. The effort of the AMA to promote screening, testing, and referral of high-risk patients for diabetes prevention through its Prevent Diabetes STAT program and the CDC's efforts to increase the availability of diabetes prevention programs, ensure their quality, and promote their use appear to be helping to identify at-risk individuals and provide the infrastructure to support individual behavioral change."