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High Incidence of Adverse Outcomes in Haemodialysis Patients with Diabetes with or without Diabetic Foot Syndrome: A 5-Year Observational Study in Lleida, Spain

By AGE2B team
October 21, 2021
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Abstract

The aim of the study was to evaluate whether, in subjects receiving haemodialysis (HD), the presence of diabetic foot syndrome (DFS) was associated with increased mortality compared with subjects with diabetes mellitus (DM) without DFS and with non-diabetic subjects.

Retrospective, observational study in 220 subjects followed for six years. We calculated and compared the frequency and 5-year cumulative incidence of all-cause mortality, cardiovascular mortality, and new foot ulcer or amputation. We also examined prognostic factors of all-cause and cardiovascular mortality based on baseline characteristics.

Diabetes patients had a 1.98 times higher probability of all-cause mortality than those without diabetes and 2.42 times higher likelihood of cardiovascular disease development with high mortality and new foot ulcer  or amputation . In the Diabetes patients, only the risk of a new foot ulcer  or amputation was 2.69 times higher among those with previousdiabetic foot syndrome. In patients with diabetes, older age was the only predictor of all-cause and Cardiovascular disease development with high mortality.

Conclusions: Although all-cause and cardiovascular mortality were increased in diabetes patients undergoing hemodialysis  subjects with diabetes, the presence of diabetes foot ulcers did not modify the excess risk. Stil it is important to treat ulcers to prevent other comorbidities development.

Source MDPI

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