2 research outputs found
The Lancet Commission on diabetes: using data to transform diabetes care and patient lives
In this Lancet Commission on diabetes, which embodies 4 years of extensive work on data curation, synthesis, and modelling, we urge policy makers, payers, and planners to collectively change the ecosystem, build capacity, and improve the clinical practice environment. Such actions will enable practitioners to systematically collect data during routine practice and to use these data effectively to diagnose early, stratify risks, define needs, improve care, evaluate solutions, and drive changes at patient, system, and policy levels to prevent and control diabetes and other non-communicable diseases. Emerging evidence regarding the possible damaging effects of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 on pancreatic islets implies the potential worsening of the COVID-19 pandemic and the diabetes epidemic, adding to the urgency of these collective actions
Lifestyle factors and risk of multimorbidity of cancer and cardiometabolic diseases: A multinational cohort study
Background: Although lifestyle factors have been studied in relation to individual non-communicable diseases (NCDs), their association with development of a subsequent NCD, defined as multimorbidity, has been scarcely investigated. The aim of this study was to investigate associations between five lifestyle factors and incident multimorbidity of cancer and cardiometabolic diseases. Methods: In this prospective cohort study, 291,778 participants (64% women) from seven European countries, mostly aged 43 to 58 years and free of cancer, cardiovascular disease (CVD), and type 2 diabetes (T2D) at recruitment, were included. Incident multimorbidity of cancer and cardiometabolic diseases was defined as developing subsequently two diseases including first cancer at any site, CVD, and T2D in an individual. Multi-state modelling based on Cox regression was used to compute hazard ratios (HR) and 95% confidence intervals (95% CI) of developing cancer, CVD, or T2D, and subsequent transitions to multimorbidity, in relation to body mass index (BMI), smoking status, alcohol intake, physical activity, adherence to the Mediterranean diet, and their combination as a healthy lifestyle index (HLI) score. Cumulative incidence functions (CIFs) were estimated to compute 10-year absolute risks for transitions from healthy to cancer at any site, CVD (both fatal and non-fatal), or T2D, and to subsequent multimorbidity after each of the three NCDs. Results: During a median follow-up of 11 years, 1910 men and 1334 women developed multimorbidity of cancer and cardiometabolic diseases. A higher HLI, reflecting healthy lifestyles, was strongly inversely associated with multimorbidity, with hazard ratios per 3-unit increment of 0.75 (95% CI, 0.71 to 0.81), 0.84 (0.79 to 0.90), and 0.82 (0.77 to 0.88) after cancer, CVD, and T2D, respectively. After T2D, the 10-year absolute risks of multimorbidity were 40% and 25% for men and women, respectively, with unhealthy lifestyle, and 30% and 18% for men and women with healthy lifestyles. Conclusion: Pre-diagnostic healthy lifestyle behaviours were strongly inversely associated with the risk of cancer and cardiometabolic diseases, and with the prognosis of these diseases by reducing risk of multimorbidity