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Gender differences in quality of life in adults with long-standing type 1 diabetes mellitus

Authors

Maria Castellano-Guerrero, Ana , Guerrero, Raquel , RUIZ ARANDA, DESIREE, Perea, Sofia , Pumar, Alfonso , Relimpio, Federico , Angel Mangas, Miguel , Losada, Fernando , Asuncion Martinez-Brocca, Maria

External publication

No

Means

Diabetol Metab Syndr

Scope

Article

Nature

Científica

JCR Quartile

SJR Quartile

JCR Impact

3.32

SJR Impact

0.955

Publication date

17/07/2020

ISI

000552393800001

Scopus Id

2-s2.0-85088465086

Abstract

Background To assess gender differences in Quality of life (QoL) and in sociodemographic, clinical and psychological factors associated with impaired QoL in adults with long-standing type 1 diabetes mellitus (DM1). Methods Cross-sectional evaluation in a random cohort of DM1 adult patients from a tertiary care hospital. QoL was evaluated using translated and validated self-administered Diabetes QoL questionnaire (Es-DQoL), and results transformed into a 0-100 scale. Psychological assessment included a planned psychological interview and self-reported questionnaires (Beck Depression Inventory II, State-Trait Anxiety Inventory Form Y, Fear of hypoglycaemia Scale, Medical Outcomes Study Social Support Survey). Results A total of 312 patients (51.6% male; 38.2 +/- 12.7 years; HbA(1c)7.5 +/- 1.1% (58.5 +/- 14.2 mmol/mol); 20.4 +/- 12.0 years of DM1) were included in the analysis. Male and female subgroups showed similar sociodemographic and diabetes-related features and comparable social support. Among female patients, higher frequency of depression [31.7% (IC95% 26.2-40.8) vs. 14.9% (IC95% 10.1-20.8), p < 0.05] and anxiety [23.2% (IC95% 19.3-33.14) vs. 13.0% (IC95% 8.1-18.4), p < 0.05] and severity of depressive and anxious symptoms were also found. Compared to male patients, female patients showed lower QoL [75 (IC95% 73.6-77.5) vs. 80 (IC95% 75.7-83.1), p < 0.05] and scored significantly worse in subscale Diabetes-related worries [69 (IC95% 50.0-81.0) vs. 75 (IC95% 72.9-79.0), p < 0.05]. Fear of hypoglycemia and severity of depressive and anxious symptoms were factors independently associated to lower QoL in men and women while high frequency of glycemic excursions was a female-specific predictive one. Conclusions Adult women with long-standing DM1 showed lower QoL probably related to higher frequency and severity of psychopathological syndromes. Depressive and anxious symptoms and, among women, exposure to glycemic excursions were identified as modifiable, QoL-related variables. Educational, technological and psychological interventions are needed in order to improve QoL in DM1 patients.

Keywords

Type 1 diabetes mellitus; Quality of life; Gender differences

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