학술논문

All-Cause, Cardiovascular, and Cancer Mortality Rates in Postmenopausal White, Black, Hispanic, and Asian Women With and Without Diabetes in the United StatesThe Women's Health Initiative, 1993–2009
Document Type
article
Source
American Journal of Epidemiology. 178(10)
Subject
Aging
Prevention
Diabetes
Cancer
Clinical Research
Metabolic and endocrine
Good Health and Well Being
African Americans
Aged
Asian Americans
Body Weights and Measures
Cardiovascular Diseases
Diabetes Mellitus
Diet
Estrogen Replacement Therapy
Exercise
Female
Hispanic or Latino
Humans
Middle Aged
Neoplasms
Postmenopause
Proportional Hazards Models
Racial Groups
Residence Characteristics
Risk Factors
Smoking
United States
Whites
diabetes
health disparities
menopause
mortality
obesity
womens health
White People
Black or African American
Asian
women's health
Mathematical Sciences
Medical and Health Sciences
Epidemiology
Language
Abstract
Using data from the Women's Health Initiative (1993-2009; n = 158,833 participants, of whom 84.1% were white, 9.2% were black, 4.1% were Hispanic, and 2.6% were Asian), we compared all-cause, cardiovascular, and cancer mortality rates in white, black, Hispanic, and Asian postmenopausal women with and without diabetes. Cox proportional hazard models were used for the comparison from which hazard ratios and 95% confidence intervals were computed. Within each racial/ethnic subgroup, women with diabetes had an approximately 2-3 times higher risk of all-cause, cardiovascular, and cancer mortality than did those without diabetes. However, the hazard ratios for mortality outcomes were not significantly different between racial/ethnic subgroups. Population attributable risk percentages (PARPs) take into account both the prevalence of diabetes and hazard ratios. For all-cause mortality, whites had the lowest PARP (11.1, 95% confidence interval (CI): 10.1, 12.1), followed by Asians (12.9, 95% CI: 4.7, 20.9), blacks (19.4, 95% CI: 15.0, 23.7), and Hispanics (23.2, 95% CI: 14.8, 31.2). To our knowledge, the present study is the first to show that hazard ratios for mortality outcomes were not significantly different between racial/ethnic subgroups when stratified by diabetes status. Because of the "amplifying" effect of diabetes prevalence, efforts to reduce racial/ethnic disparities in the rate of death from diabetes should focus on prevention of diabetes.