Aim
To develop and validate risk score systems by examining the effects of glycaemic and blood pressure variabilities on the all‐cause and expanded cardiovascular‐specific mortality of people with type 2 diabetes.
Materials and methods
This retrospective cohort study consisted of 9692 patients aged 30‐85 years, diagnosed with type 2 diabetes and enrolled in a managed care programme of a medical centre from 2002 to 2016. All the patients were randomly allocated into two groups, namely, training and validation sets (2:1 ratio), and followed up until death or August 2019. Cox's proportional hazard regression was performed to develop all‐cause and expanded cardiovascular‐specific mortality prediction models. The performance of the prediction model was assessed by using the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC).
Results
Overall, 2036 deaths were identified after a mean of 8.6 years of follow‐up. The AUROC‐measured prediction accuracies of 3‐, 5‐, 10‐ and 15‐year all‐cause mortalities based on a model containing the identified traditional risk factors, biomarkers and variabilities in fasting plasma glucose, HbA1c and blood pressure in the validation set were 0.79 (0.76‐0.83), 0.78 (0.76‐0.81), 0.80 (0.78‐0.82) and 0.80 (0.78‐0.82), respectively. The corresponding values of the expanded cardiovascular‐specific mortalities were 0.85 (0.80‐0.90), 0.83 (0.79‐0.86), 0.80 (0.77‐0.83) and 0.79 (0.77‐0.82), respectively.
Conclusions
Our prediction models considering glycaemic and blood pressure variabilities had good prediction accuracy for the expanded cardiovascular‐specific and all‐cause mortalities of patients with type 2 diabetes.