医学
回顾性队列研究
2型糖尿病
糖尿病
队列
优势比
队列研究
内科学
逻辑回归
儿科
内分泌学
作者
Barune Thapa,Julie A. Schmittdiel,David Arterburn,Romain Neugebauer,Wendy Dyer,Patrick J. O’Connor,Jaejin An,Andrea E. Cassidy‐Bushrow,Lisa K. Gilliam,Stephanie Ann Hooker,Margaret Nolan,Caryn Oshiro,Tainayah Thomas,Gregg D. Simonson,Sarah Krahe Dombrowski,Luis A. Rodríguez
出处
期刊:Diabetes Care
[American Diabetes Association]
日期:2025-07-30
摘要
OBJECTIVE To assess the real-world frequency and characteristics associated with type 2 diabetes remission in a large and diverse cohort of U.S. adults. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS This retrospective cohort study used 2014–2023 electronic health record data from six major U.S. health care delivery systems. The cohort included 556,758 adults (≥18 years) with type 2 diabetes who had one or more HbA1c measurement in 2 years before study entry and evidence of glucose-lowering medication use. Pregnant women or adults who underwent bariatric surgery before or during the study were excluded. Type 2 diabetes remission was defined as HbA1c <6.5% persisting for ≥3 months after cessation of glucose-lowering medications. Multivariate logistic regression was used to identify characteristics associated with type 2 diabetes remission. RESULTS Over a 3-year follow-up, 2.9% (16,016 adults) achieved type 2 diabetes remission, although 36.9% of those who experienced remission relapsed. The strongest characteristics associated with remission were not receiving glucose-lowering medications at baseline versus three or more medications (odds ratio [OR] 15.9, 95% CI 12.1–21.0), baseline HbA1c <7% vs. ≥11% (OR 3.1, 2.9–3.3) and diabetes duration <1 year versus ≥4 years (OR 2.6, 2.5–2.7). CONCLUSIONS Type 2 diabetes remission was low among adults without bariatric surgery. The strongest associated characteristics were fewer diabetes medications, lower baseline HbA1c, and shorter diabetes duration. These findings highlight actionable factors to identify patients who may benefit most from targeted interventions. Future research should evaluate the long-term durability and health impacts of remission.
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