Peripheral Arterial Diseases and Diabetes Mellitus: Associations With Quality of Health Measures in Patients Undergoing Percutaneous Vascular Interventions

Peripheral arterial disease (PAD) is more prevalent and severe in patients with diabetes mellitus (DM) compared with those without DM. Peripheral vascular intervention (PVI) is often used in patients failing conservative management. The association of PVI with health status in diabetic patients has...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cardiovascular revascularization medicine 2023-03, Vol.48, p.34-38
Hauptverfasser: Haque, Mahfujul Z., Reesha, Syeda, Khan, Shahrin, Rafique, Rumyah, Saleem, Abdulmalik, Ilyas, Omar, Abdullah, Luqman, Hussain, Arif, Husain, Mashkur
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Peripheral arterial disease (PAD) is more prevalent and severe in patients with diabetes mellitus (DM) compared with those without DM. Peripheral vascular intervention (PVI) is often used in patients failing conservative management. The association of PVI with health status in diabetic patients has yet to be determined. We analyzed the clinical response to PVI in DM (n = 203, 52 %) compared with non-DM patients (n = 183, 48 %), using the Peripheral Arterial Questionnaire (PAQ) for patients during baseline and a maximum 6 months after PVI. We used the PAQ summary score, which summarized the patients' level of physical and social function, patient symptoms, and overall quality of life. This represented the PAD-related Quality of Health (QOH). Our score range is between 0 (lowest health quality) and 100 (highest health quality). Compared with non-DM patients, those with DM were more likely to have a history of prior PVI, an increased prevalence of PAD risk factors, and significantly lower QOH scores at baseline (32.7 ± 20 vs 37.5 ± 20.6, p = 0.02). After adjustment for baseline confounding, neither the baseline, the change, nor the final summary scores were significantly different between groups, suggesting similar symptomatic and functional improvement in non-DM and DM patients post-PVI. CONCLUSIONS: Following PVI, PAD-specific health status showed a similar improvement in patients with and without DM, illustrating that use of this strategy among patients with multiple comorbidities or diffuse PAD as useful. •Peripheral arterial disease (PAD) is severe in patients with diabetes mellitus (DM).•Older African Americans patients have less improvement following PVI.•DM patients have a history of prior PVI and lower health quality scores at baseline.•After PVI, PAD-specific health status showed improvement in DM and non-DM patients.
ISSN:1553-8389
1878-0938
DOI:10.1016/j.carrev.2022.11.003