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July 07, 2015; 85 (1) Article

Longitudinal patient-oriented outcomes in neuropathy

Importance of early detection and falls

Brian Callaghan, Kevin Kerber, Kenneth M. Langa, Mousumi Banerjee, Ann Rodgers, Ryan McCammon, James Burke, Eva Feldman
First published May 27, 2015, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1212/WNL.0000000000001714
Brian Callaghan
From the University of Michigan (B.C., K.K., K.M.L., M.B., A.R., R.M., J.B., E.F.); and the VA Center for Clinical Management Research (K.M.L., J.B.), Ann Arbor, MI.
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Kevin Kerber
From the University of Michigan (B.C., K.K., K.M.L., M.B., A.R., R.M., J.B., E.F.); and the VA Center for Clinical Management Research (K.M.L., J.B.), Ann Arbor, MI.
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Kenneth M. Langa
From the University of Michigan (B.C., K.K., K.M.L., M.B., A.R., R.M., J.B., E.F.); and the VA Center for Clinical Management Research (K.M.L., J.B.), Ann Arbor, MI.
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Mousumi Banerjee
From the University of Michigan (B.C., K.K., K.M.L., M.B., A.R., R.M., J.B., E.F.); and the VA Center for Clinical Management Research (K.M.L., J.B.), Ann Arbor, MI.
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Ann Rodgers
From the University of Michigan (B.C., K.K., K.M.L., M.B., A.R., R.M., J.B., E.F.); and the VA Center for Clinical Management Research (K.M.L., J.B.), Ann Arbor, MI.
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Ryan McCammon
From the University of Michigan (B.C., K.K., K.M.L., M.B., A.R., R.M., J.B., E.F.); and the VA Center for Clinical Management Research (K.M.L., J.B.), Ann Arbor, MI.
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James Burke
From the University of Michigan (B.C., K.K., K.M.L., M.B., A.R., R.M., J.B., E.F.); and the VA Center for Clinical Management Research (K.M.L., J.B.), Ann Arbor, MI.
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Eva Feldman
From the University of Michigan (B.C., K.K., K.M.L., M.B., A.R., R.M., J.B., E.F.); and the VA Center for Clinical Management Research (K.M.L., J.B.), Ann Arbor, MI.
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Citation
Longitudinal patient-oriented outcomes in neuropathy
Importance of early detection and falls
Brian Callaghan, Kevin Kerber, Kenneth M. Langa, Mousumi Banerjee, Ann Rodgers, Ryan McCammon, James Burke, Eva Feldman
Neurology Jul 2015, 85 (1) 71-79; DOI: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000001714

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Abstract

Objective: To evaluate longitudinal patient-oriented outcomes in peripheral neuropathy over a 14-year time period including time before and after diagnosis.

Methods: The 1996–2007 Health and Retirement Study (HRS)–Medicare Claims linked database identified incident peripheral neuropathy cases (ICD-9 codes) in patients ≥65 years. Using detailed demographic information from the HRS and Medicare claims, a propensity score method identified a matched control group without neuropathy. Patient-oriented outcomes, with an emphasis on self-reported falls, pain, and self-rated health (HRS interview), were determined before and after neuropathy diagnosis. Generalized estimating equations were used to assess differences in longitudinal outcomes between cases and controls.

Results: We identified 953 peripheral neuropathy cases and 953 propensity-matched controls. The mean (SD) age was 77.4 (6.7) years for cases, 76.9 (6.6) years for controls, and 42.1% had diabetes. Differences were detected in falls 3.0 years before neuropathy diagnosis (case vs control; 32% vs 25%, p = 0.008), 5.0 years for pain (36% vs 27%, p = 0.002), and 5.0 years for good to excellent self-rated health (61% vs 74%, p < 0.0001). Over time, the proportion of fallers increased more rapidly in neuropathy cases compared to controls (p = 0.002), but no differences in pain (p = 0.08) or self-rated health (p = 0.9) were observed.

Conclusions: In older persons, differences in falls, pain, and self-rated health can be detected 3–5 years prior to peripheral neuropathy diagnosis, but only falls deteriorates more rapidly over time in neuropathy cases compared to controls. Interventions to improve early peripheral neuropathy detection are needed, and future clinical trials should incorporate falls as a key patient-oriented outcome.

GLOSSARY

ADL=
activities of daily living;
CI=
confidence interval;
GEE=
generalized estimating equations;
HRS=
Health and Retirement Study;
IADL=
instrumental activities of daily living;
ICD-9=
International Classification of Diseases–9;
OR=
odds ratio

Footnotes

  • Go to Neurology.org for full disclosures. Funding information and disclosures deemed relevant by the authors, if any, are provided at the end of the article.

  • Received November 14, 2014.
  • Accepted in final form March 13, 2015.
  • © 2015 American Academy of Neurology
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