Detection of undisclosed neuropathy and assessment of its impact on quality of life: a survey in 25,000 Romanian patients with diabetes.

Journal: Journal Of Diabetes And Its Complications
Published:
Abstract

Objective: The objective of this cross-sectional survey was to capture undiagnosed neuropathy in Romanian patients with self-reported diabetes using Norfolk QoL-DN as a screening tool and to assess its impact on quality of life (QoL).

Methods: 25,000 Romanian-translated, validated Norfolk QoL-DN questionnaires were distributed between June and December 2012. 21,261 patients who self-reported diabetes and answered questions related to neuropathy, ulceration, gangrene and amputation were included in the analysis.

Results: 52% of diabetic patients (n = 6615) who answered "no" to the question "Do you have neuropathy?" had total QoL scores above the cut-off, suggesting the presence of diabetic neuropathy. 13,854 (65.2%) patients answered "yes" to the question "Do you have neuropathy?" and 3,150 (14.8%) reported at least one episode of ulceration, gangrene or amputation. Total QoL score was 3-fold higher (worse) for patients who answered "yes" to the question "Do you have neuropathy?" than for those who answered "no" (38.39 vs. 13.71; p < 0.001) and 1.4-fold worse for patients who reported ulceration, gangrene or amputation than for those who did not report any of these (50.38 vs. 34.87; p < 0.001).

Conclusions: We found a high prevalence of undisclosed diabetic neuropathy in this population and showed that neuropathy severity has an increasing impact on total QoL and its domains.

Authors
Andrei Veresiu, Cosmina Bondor, Bogdan Florea, Etta Vinik, Aaron Vinik, Norina Gâvan