1. Development and Validation of a Tool to Identify Patients With Type 2 Diabetes at High Risk of Hypoglycemia-Related Emergency Department or Hospital Use
- Author
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James D. Ralston, Kasia J. Lipska, Andrew J. Karter, Donald R. Miller, Howard H. Moffet, Elbert S. Huang, E. Margaret Warton, and Geoffrey G. Jackson
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,endocrine system diseases ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Recursive partitioning ,Hypoglycemia ,Risk Assessment ,03 medical and health sciences ,Patient safety ,0302 clinical medicine ,Quality of life ,Risk Factors ,Health care ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Electronic Health Records ,Humans ,Hypoglycemic Agents ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Prospective Studies ,Intensive care medicine ,business.industry ,Delivery of Health Care, Integrated ,Medical record ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Incidence ,nutritional and metabolic diseases ,Emergency department ,medicine.disease ,United States ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ,Emergency medicine ,Quality of Life ,Female ,business ,Emergency Service, Hospital ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Hypoglycemia-related emergency department (ED) or hospital use among patients with type 2 diabetes (T2D) is clinically significant and possibly preventable.To develop and validate a tool to categorize risk of hypoglycemic-related utilization in patients with T2D.Using recursive partitioning with a split-sample design, we created a classification tree based on potential predictors of hypoglycemia-related ED or hospital use. The resulting model was transcribed into a tool for practical application and tested in 1 internal and 2 fully independent, external samples. Development and internal testing was conducted in a split sample of 206 435 patients with T2D from Kaiser Permanente Northern California (KPNC), an integrated health care system. The tool was externally tested in 1 335 966 Veterans Health Administration and 14 972 Group Health Cooperative patients with T2D.Based on a literature review, we identified 156 candidate predictor variables (prebaseline exposures) using data collected from electronic medical records.Hypoglycemia-related ED or hospital use during 12 months of follow-up.The derivation sample (n = 165 148) had a mean (SD) age of 63.9 (13.0) years and included 78 576 (47.6%) women. The crude annual rate of at least 1 hypoglycemia-related ED or hospital encounter in the KPNC derivation sample was 0.49%. The resulting hypoglycemia risk stratification tool required 6 patient-specific inputs: number of prior episodes of hypoglycemia-related utilization, insulin use, sulfonylurea use, prior year ED use, chronic kidney disease stage, and age. We categorized the predicted 12-month risk of any hypoglycemia-related utilization as high (5%), intermediate (1%-5%), or low (1%). In the internal validation sample, 2.0%, 10.7%, and 87.3% were categorized as high, intermediate, and low risk, respectively, with observed 12-month hypoglycemia-related utilization rates of 6.7%, 1.4%, and 0.2%, respectively. There was good discrimination in the internal validation KPNC sample (C statistic = 0.83) and both external validation samples (Veterans Health Administration: C statistic = 0.81; Group Health Cooperative: C statistic = 0.79).This hypoglycemia risk stratification tool categorizes the 12-month risk of hypoglycemia-related utilization in patients with T2D using only 6 inputs. This tool could facilitate targeted population management interventions, potentially reducing hypoglycemia risk and improving patient safety and quality of life.
- Published
- 2017