The proportion of patients with type 2 diabetes who develop microalbuminuria is substantial with one quarter affected by 10 years from diagnosis. Relatively fewer patients develop macroalbuminuria, but in those who do, the death rate exceeds the rate of progression to worse nephropathy.
SummaryBackground-Although heart rate and respiratory rate are routinely measured in children in acute settings, current reference ranges are not evidence-based. The aim of this study is to derive new centile charts for heart rate and respiratory rate using systematic review data from existing studies, and to compare these with existing international ranges.
Aims/hypothesis. The aim of this study was to develop a simulation model for Type 2 diabetes that can be used to estimate the likely occurrence of major diabetes-related complications over a lifetime, in order to calculate health economic outcomes such as qualityadjusted life expectancy. Methods. Equations for forecasting the occurrence of seven diabetes-related complications and death were estimated using data on 3642 patients from the United Kingdom Prospective Diabetes Study (UKPDS). After examining the internal validity, the UKPDS Outcomes Model was used to simulate the mean difference in expected quality-adjusted life years between the UKPDS regimens of intensive and conventional blood glucose control. Results. The model's forecasts fell within the 95% confidence interval for the occurrence of observed events during the UKPDS follow-up period. When the model was used to simulate event history over patients' lifetimes, those treated with a regimen of conventional glucose control could expect 16.35 undiscounted quality-adjusted life years, and those receiving treatment with intensive glucose control could expect 16.62 quality-adjusted life years, a difference of 0.27 (95% CI: −0.48 to 1.03).
Conclusions/interpretations. The UKPDS OutcomesModel is able to simulate event histories that closely match observed outcomes in the UKPDS and that can be extrapolated over patients' lifetimes. Its validity in estimating outcomes in other groups of patients, however, remains to be evaluated. The model allows simulation of a range of long-term outcomes, which should assist in informing future economic evaluations of interventions in Type 2 diabetes. The centres of the UKPDS are listed at the end of the paper Conflict of interest. Several authors (as indicated above) are employed by the University of Oxford. This paper describes and places in the public domain a simulation model that we have called the UKPDS Outcomes Model. All of the information necessary to reproduce the UKPDS Outcomes Model is provided in this article, but it is conceivable that a future user with a commercial interest in the UKPDS Outcomes Model might prefer to use the software already created by University programmers. Depending on the nature of the proposed use of the UKPDS Outcomes Model, the University of Oxford might charge a fee in this case.
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