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Show Effect of Diabetes Mellitus on Giant Cell Arteritis Anne S. Abel, MD, Arseniy P. Yashkin, PhD, Frank A. Sloan, PhD, Michael S. Lee, MD Background: To determine if Type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM) is protective against giant cell arteritis (GCA) and to estimate the incidence of GCA diagnosis from Medicare claims. Methods: Medicare 5% claims files from 1991 to 2011 were used to identify beneficiaries diagnosed with DM, but not GCA, within a 3-year ascertainment period. Propensity score matching was used to define a control group of non-diabetics with comparable demographic covariates. Com-peting risk regression was then used to assess the impact of DM diagnosis on GCA diagnosis. To allow for a 3-year ascertainment period, the analysis sample was limited to beneficiaries older than 68 years at baseline. Results: A total of 151,041 beneficiaries diagnosed with DM were matched to an equal number of controls. Mean study follow-up was 67.75 months. GCA was diagnosed among 1116 beneficiaries with DM (0.73%) vs 465 (0.30%) controls. The risk of receiving a GCA diagnosis among patients with DM was increased by 100% (sub-hazard ratio, 2.00; 95% confidence interval, 1.78-2.25). The annual incidence of GCA diagnosis among claims for US Medicare beneficiaries older than 68 years old was 93 in 100,000. Conclusions: A DM diagnosis is not protective against a GCA diagnosis in the Medicare population. Our data suggest that a DM diagnosis increases the risk of GCA diagnosis within 5.7 years for Medicare beneficiaries older than 68 years. Journal of Neuro-Ophthalmology 2015;35:134-138 doi: 10.1097/WNO.0000000000000218 © 2015 by North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society Giant cell arteritis (GCA) is a T-cell-dependent vascu-litis of medium and large arteries, almost exclusively affecting patients older than 50 years (1). Histologically, GCA causes panarteritis with infiltration of the vessel wall by activated T cells and macrophages (1). Destruction of the internal elastic lamina and intimal hyperplasia lead to an occlusive vasculitis, which can result in irreversible blind-ness, myocardial infarction, or stroke if untreated. Diagnosis of GCA requires careful consideration of clinical presenta-tion and serum inflammatory markers. Ultimately, the diag-nostic gold standard for GCA remains temporal artery biopsy (TAB). Clinically, the diagnosis can be quite challenging, especially in the absence of headache, jaw claudication, or other systemic GCA symptoms. Physicians must weigh their clinical index of suspicion in the context of serum erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), C-reactive protein (CRP), and platelet levels to decide when to start corticosteroids and proceed with TAB. Unfortunately, ESR and CRP are not 100% sensitive or specific, and equivocal serum inflammatory markers can occur in biopsy-proven GCA. Conversely, chronically elevated ESR and CRP can occur in patients without GCA who have diabetes mellitus (DM), cardiovascular disease, and metabolic syndromes (2-7). Previous reports have identified a potentially protective effect of DM against GCA (5,8,9). Proposed mechanisms include an altered cytokine profile, impaired T-cell response, and impaired dendritic cell function due to exces-sive antigen glycosylation (5,8,9). One recent retrospective study found a lower prevalence of DM among patients with a positive TAB than with a negative TAB (5). A meta-analysis of 8 GCA studies found a low prevalence of biopsy-positive GCA among patients with DM (5). The authors suggested that DM may actually lower the risk of GCA. Additionally, they implied that elevated ESR and CRP may result from DM and may not increase the likeli-hood of GCA diagnosis. If this is true, our GCA practice patterns for patients with DM may change dramatically. We sought to explore this hypothesis in a larger patient population. Given the low incidence of GCA, it is not Departments of Ophthalmology and Visual Neurosciences (ASA, MSL), Neurology (MSL), and Neurosurgery (MSL), University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota; and Department of Economics (APY, FAS), Duke University, Durham, North Carolina. Partial support for this study was obtained from a grant from the National Institute on Aging (NIA) to Duke University (R01- AG017473) and from a grant from Research to Prevent Blindness (New York, NY), Lions Club of Minnesota (M.S.L.). The funding organizations had no role in the design or conduct of this research. Presented at the North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society Annual Meeting, March 1-6, 2014, Rio Grande, Puerto Rico. The authors report no conflicts of interest. Address correspondence to Michael S. Lee, MD, 420 Delaware Street SE, MMC 493, Minneapolis, MN 55455; E-mail: mikelee@umn.edu 134 Abel et al: J Neuro-Ophthalmol 2015; 35: 134-138 Original Contribution Copyright © North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society. Unauthorized reproduction of this article is prohibited. practical to study the relationship between DM and GCA prospectively (10-19). Therefore, we queried the Medicare 5% claims and enrollment data and then followed beneficia-ries through time to compare the incidence of GCA diagnosis among individuals with and without a DM diagnosis. METHODS Institutional Review Board approval was obtained for this study from Duke University Medical Center. Data Medicare is a national health insurance program that serves Americans who live within the geographical borders of the United States. Most Medicare beneficiaries qualify at age 65 years. Younger individuals with a qualifying disability may also be enrolled. The Medicare 5% claims data set is a nationally representative random sample of the overall Medicare beneficiary population containing information on services paid for by Medicare Part A (covering hospital and other facility-based services) and Medicare Part B (covering professional services, mostly provided by physicians). Claims information is not available for beneficiaries who enroll in a MA plan, a private alternative to traditional Medicare. The 5% Medicare claims and enrollment data from 1991 to 2011 was queried for diagnoses of DM and GCA. Demographic characteristics, enrollment informa-tion, International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision (ICD-9) codes, and Current Procedure Terminology (CPT) codes were available for the entire sample. Beneficiaries enrolled in MA plans were excluded because the 5% sample does not include claims for care provided by MA. Sample Selection To assess the incidence of GCA diagnosis, study inclusion required an ascertainment period of 3 years during which a diagnosis of GCA was not documented. Because TAB results are not part of theMedicare 5% sample data, GCA was defined as 1) any beneficiary who received a GCA diagnosis (ICD-9, 446.5) after a TAB (CPT 37609) or 2) any patient who received 2 GCA diagnoses (ICD-9, 446.5) within 180 days. To ensure the availability of a 3-year ascertainment period, beneficiaries were required to be at age 68 years or older at baseline. This ascertainment period has been used in other studies (20,21). Baseline was defined as the date of the first Type 2 DM diagnosis (ICD-9, 250.xx). For the DM group and the first date, after the beneficiary's 68th birthday, a Medi-care claim appeared in the claims data. All beneficiaries diag-nosed with DM received this diagnosis before being diagnosed with GCA. The non-DM control group was identified using propensity score matching (PSM) to select a matched sample of beneficiaries who were never diagnosed with Type 2 DM dur-ing the 3-year ascertainment period or during follow-up. Current standards of PSM research accept a standardized difference of roughly 10% between the treatment and control groups for all covariates of interest (22-25). Matching cova-riates were gender, black race, other race (white race omitted), baseline year, age at baseline, and binary variables for hyper-tension (ICD-9, 401.xx) and hyperlipidemia (ICD-9, 272.0x- 272.4x) at baseline. We used logistic regression to estimate the propensity score and the nearest neighbor matching (without replacement) within a caliper of 0.001 to identify the match. The size of the caliper was well below the 20% of the SD of the propensity score guideline suggested in the literature (26). Beneficiaries meeting the inclusion criteria were followed until they were 1) diagnosed with GCA, 2) died, or 3) otherwise censored. Beneficiaries were censored if they 1) joined a MA plan, 2) moved outside the United States, or 3) had no Medicare claims during follow-up. Statistical Analysis The DM and non-DM group were compared using a com-peting risk regression model based on the method of Fine and Gray (27). The underlying rationale for competing risk regres-sion has been discussed elsewhere (28-30). Briefly, competing risk regression uses the cumulative incidence function to model probability of failure from a specific cause (the primary risk) in the presence of other events that could prevent the outcome of interest (the competing risks). GCA diagnosis was the primary risk, and death was the competing risk. The subhazard ratios (SHR) are interpreted like hazard ratios in Cox regression. Given the advanced age and morbidity of the Medicare pop-ulation, competing risk regression was chosen over Cox regres-sion, because the risk of death from all other causes could potentially censor the observations of interest prematurely. The incidence of GCA was calculated by dividing the number of GCA diagnoses for the PSM-matched cohort by the total number of person-years, which was calculated by multiplying the number of PSM-matched beneficiaries by the average study time. RESULTS A total of 151,041 beneficiaries with a Type 2 DM diagnosis were matched to an equal number of beneficiaries without a Type 2 DM diagnosis. In the absence of PSM, the beneficiary mix in the DM and non-DM groups was not comparable with respect to hyperlipidemia, hyperten-sion, and baseline year, as these covariates exceeded the 10% standardized difference criterion (20-23). PSM sub-stantially improved the comparability of both groups, bring-ing all covariates well within the 10% guideline (Table 1). In the pooled sample, the majority of subjects were white (82.3%) and female (58.8%). A total of 9.9% were black, and 7.8% were identified as other race. The mean beneficiary age at baseline was 77.7 years. The mean age for black and non-black beneficiaries was 77.6 and 77.7 years, respectively (P , 0.01). Substantial beneficiary frac-tions were diagnosed with hyperlipidemia (26.8%) and hypertension (59.1%). Abel et al: J Neuro-Ophthalmol 2015; 35: 134-138 135 Original Contribution Copyright © North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society. Unauthorized reproduction of this article is prohibited. Mean study time was similar for the DM and non-DM groups (67.4 months and 68.1 months, respectively). Median follow-up was 56 months for the DM group and 57 months for the non-DM group. In the DM group, GCA was diagnosed in 1116 (0.73%) beneficiaries vs 465 (0.30%) beneficiaries in the non-DM group. Death, the competing risk event, occurred in 94,273 (62.42%) of the DM group and 80,512 (46.39%) of the non-DM group. The risk of receiving a GCA diagnosis among beneficiaries diagnosed with Type 2 DM increased by 100% (SHR: 2.00; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.78-2.25). Non-white race and male gender were primarily protective. Hyperlipidemia and hypertension increased the risk of GCA (Table 2, Fig. 1). Of the 302,082 PSM-matched beneficiaries included in this study, 1581 were diagnosed with GCA (GCA group). The majority (85%) of the GCA group had a GCA diagnosis after TAB, whereas only 15% of the GCA group had 2 diagnoses of GCA within a 180-day period but no TAB. We conducted a sensitivity analysis omitting the 2 diagnosis-only group and observed no significant difference in the results. The mean study time for the entire matched cohort was 67.8 months or 5.7 years. The annual incidence of GCA diagnosis was 92 diagnoses per 100,000 beneficiaries. The incidence of GCA diagnosis was significantly higher among white beneficiaries than black beneficiaries (98 per 100,000 vs 77 per 100,000, respectively [P , 0.001]). DISCUSSION Contrary to previous reports suggesting a protective effect of DM on GCA, we found that Medicare beneficiaries older than 68 years with a Type 2 DM diagnosis were more likely to receive a GCA diagnosis than beneficiaries older than 68 years without a DM diagnosis. Type 2 DM does not appear protective against GCA in this population, and our data showed that it increased the risk of GCA by 100%. TABLE 1. Sample characteristics of patients with diabetes and healthy controls before and after propensity score matching Before Matching After Matching DM Group (Treatment) No DM Group (Control) Standardized Difference (%) DM Group (Treatment) No DM Group (Control) Standardized Difference (%) Covariate Male 0.40 0.36 7.88 0.40 0.42 24.54 Black 0.08 0.07 7.10 0.09 0.11 26.42 Other 0.07 0.06 5.19 0.07 0.08 26.11 Age at baseline 77.93 77.41 7.44 77.89 77.56 4.42 Hyperlipidemia 0.71 0.05 188.28 0.28 0.26 4.80 Hypertension 0.85 0.14 204.35 0.58 0.61 25.95 Baseline year 2002 (+8 mo) 1995 (+6 mo) 120.46 2000 (+3 mo) 2000 5.35 n 536,115 1,069,735 151,041 n = 151,041 Standardized differences, greater than 10% are in bold. Values presented are group means, which correspond to the percentages of the population for the binary variables. DM, diabetes mellitus. TABLE 2. Risk factors for giant cell arteritis SHR (95% CI) Diabetic 2.00* (1.78-2.25) Male 0.47* (0.41-0.53) Black 0.76† (0.62-0.93) Hyperlipidemia 1.27* (1.12-1.42) Hypertension 1.22† (1.09-1.36) Age at baseline 0.97* (0.96-0.98) Baseline year 0.98* (0.97-0.99) N 302,082 % With condition 0.52 These are adjusted risk factors. Other race, including Hispanic ethnicity was also controlled for in the analysis. *P , 0.01 confidence intervals are reported at 95%. †P , 0.05. CI, confidence interval; GCA, giant cell arteritis; SHR, subhazard ratio. 136 Abel et al: J Neuro-Ophthalmol 2015; 35: 134-138 Original Contribution Copyright © North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society. Unauthorized reproduction of this article is prohibited. Pathophysiologic links between DM and GCA have been proposed but not well defined. Previous studies have suggested that an impaired T-cell response in DM is protective against GCA (5,8,9). Our results suggest the opposite (5,8,9). The study by Matthews et al (5) was a retrospective study of 215 patients at one academic institution. One strength of this study was that all subjects underwent TAB. Only 44 patients had biopsy-positive GCA, and only 4 of these patients had DM. Cid et al (8) studied 200 biopsy-positive patients with GCA at 3 hospitals, and Gonzalez-Gay et al (9) studied 215 biopsy-positive patients at 1 hospital. The relatively small sample sizes in these studies compared with our sample of more than 300,000 Medicare beneficiaries may explain our conflicting results. Moreover, our random sampling of the national data-base removes the selection bias inherent in the single center studies. Because our inclusion criteria did not mandate TAB results like the aforementioned studies, we acknowledge that our GCA incidence may be overestimated. However, the over-whelming majority (85%) of our GCA group received a GCA diagnosis after TAB, implying that the biopsy was positive. Mounting evidence suggests a common abnormality between cell-mediated immune dysfunction in patients with DM and GCA, which may support our findings. Specifically, regulatory T-cell (Treg) deficiency has been implicated in various autoimmune and metabolic disorders, including rheumatoid arthritis, atherosclerosis, diabetes Type-1, meta-bolic syndrome, and multiple sclerosis (31). Patients with GCA and polymyalgia rheumatic may have decreased serum levels of these immunosuppressant Treg cells (32). Conceivably, an impaired immune response, possibly due to Treg deficiency, may represent a common thread between DM and GCA that could explain the increased risk of GCA diagnosis we found in Type 2 diabetic Medicare beneficiaries older than 68 years. The annual incidence of GCA has been previously reported in geographically and ethnically homogenous populations older than 50 years. Retrospective studies of primarily Scandinavian populations from Northern Europe and Olmsted County, Minnesota, indicate an annual incidence around 20 per 100,000 individuals older than 50 years (10-15). A lower GCA incidence of 10 per 100,000 was reported in Mediterranean populations older than 50 years (14,16-19). An accurate annual incidence of GCA across the entire US population has not been firmly established. Our study found an overall incidence of GCA diagnosis of 92 per 100,000 US Medicare beneficiaries old-er than 68 years. This cannot be compared directly with previously published series because of the different ages of the populations studied. GCA rarely occurs among black individuals (19,33), and our results suggest this observation. The reasons for this difference are unclear, and additional research is needed to determine the effect of race on GCA diagnosis. We acknowledge the inherent limitations of using billing records to measure disease incidence. Medicare claims data are designed for administrative rather than for clinical purposes. However, use of these data has been shown to provide valid measures of underlying clinical phenomena (34). We also recognize that not all providers use strict diagnostic criteria when coding for GCA.We assumed that 1) a GCA diagnostic billing code after a TAB CPT code implies that the TAB was positive and 2) 2 GCA ICD-9 codes within 180 days indicates the presence of GCA. Conceivably, we may be overestimating the incidence of GCA by including beneficiaries with 2 GCA diagnoses within 180 days and not requiring a GCA diagnosis after TAB for study inclusion. This study's retrospective design is also a limitation. Finally, PSM does not completely eliminate selection bias or replace random assignment (35). In conclusion, we found that DM is not protective against GCA in the Medicare population. Our data suggest that a diagnosis of DM increases the risk of GCA diagnosis in Medicare beneficiaries older than 68 years. Contrary to previous studies, our results suggest that elevated ESR and CRP are just as concerning in patients with diabetes as they are in patients without diabetes undergoing GCA evalua-tion. Ideally, a prospective study would further clarify the relationship between DM and GCA. To our knowledge, this is the largest population-based study to report the incidence of GCA in the Medicare population. STATEMENT OF AUTHORSHIP Category 1: a. Conception and design, M. S. Lee, F. A. Sloan, A. S. Abel. b. Acquisition of data: F. A. Sloan, A. P. Yashkin. c. Analysis and interpretation of data: M. S. Lee, F. A. Sloan, A. P. Yashkin, A. S Abel. Category 2: a. Drafting the manuscript: M. S. Lee, F. A. Sloan, A. P. Yashkin, A. S. Abel. b. Revising it for intellectual content: M. S. Lee, F. A. Sloan, A. P. Yashkin, A. S. Abel. Category 3: a. 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