Objective: Although diabetes is conveniently assessed by self-report,
few validation studies have been performed. Therefore, we studied whether self-report
of prevalent and incident diabetes in Women's Health Initiative (WHI) participants
was concordant with other diagnostic evidence of diabetes.
Study Design and Setting: A total of 161 808 postmenopausal women aged
50—79 were enrolled at 40 clinical centers in the U.S. in 1993—1998 and followed
prospectively. At baseline, prevalent medication treated diabetes was defined as a
self-report of physician diagnosis and treatment with insulin or oral antidiabetic
drugs. During followup, incident treated diabetes was defined as a self-report of a
new physician diagnosis of diabetes treated with insulin or oral drugs. Diabetes
self-reports were compared with medication inventories and fasting glucose levels at
baseline and during follow-up.
Results: At baseline, self-reported treated diabetes was concordant with
the medication inventory in 79% of clinical trial, and 77% of observational study
participants. Self-reported incident treated diabetes was concordant with the
medication inventory in 78% between baseline and Year 1 in the clinical trials, in
62% between Year 1 and Year 3 in the clinical trials, and in 72% between baseline and
Year 3 in the observational study. Over similar periods, 99.9% of those who did not
report treated diabetes had no oral antidiabetic drugs or insulin in the medication
inventory. At baseline, about 3% not reporting diabetes had fasting glucose >126
mg/dl, and 88% of these subjects subsequently reported treated diabetes during 6.9
years of follow-up.
Limitations: Incident self-reported diabetes treated by lifestyle alone
was not determined in WHI. Medication inventories may have been incomplete and
fasting glucose may have been lowered by treatment; therefore, concordance with
self-reported treatment or fasting glucose ≥ 126 may have been underestimated.
Conclusion: In the WHI, self-reported prevalent and incident diabetes
was consistent with medication inventories, and a high proportion of those with
undiagnosed diabetes subsequently reported diabetes treatment. Self-reports of
`treated diabetes' are sufficiently accurate to allow use in epidemiologic studies.
Clinical Trials 2008; 5: 240—247. http://ctj.sagepub.com