Aim: Diabetes mellitus is a major cause of death. Outpatients with diabetes have more complications than patients in general practice; mortality patterns have only been studied in the total diabetes population. This study aims to assess mortality, causes, and predictors in outpatients with diabetes.
Materials and methods: A cohort study, included people with diabetes mellitus from the nationwide Dutch Paediatric and Adult Registry of Diabetes (DPARD) visiting diabetes outpatient clinics in 2016-2020. DPARD data were linked to Statistics Netherlands (CBS), comprising data on mortality, ethnicity and education. All-cause and cardiovascular mortality rates were estimated using Cox proportional hazard regression.
Results: During a median follow-up of 3.1 years among 12 992 people with diabetes, mortality rates per 10 000 person-years were 67.7 in adult type 1 diabetes and 324.2 in type 2 diabetes. The major cause of non-cardiovascular death was malignancy. During the pandemic years of influenza (2018) and COVID (2020), mortality rates peaked. Age, smoking and an estimated glomerular filtration rate of <60 ml/min were associated with all-cause mortality. In type 2 diabetes, additional factors were male sex, body mass index <20 kg/m2, diabetes duration <1 year and hypertension.
Conclusions: Mortality among Dutch outpatients with diabetes is high. Smoking and renal failure were associated with mortality in both types. Further focus on early detection and treatment of mortality-associated factors may improve clinical outcomes.
Keywords: database research; diabetes complications; type 1 diabetes; type 2 diabetes.
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