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Lower Extremity Amputations Are Most Common in Type 1 Patients

Among the many complications from diabetes, foot and leg amputations may be one of the most widely known to those outside of the diabetes community.

But, until very recently, the actual rates of amputation among people with type 1 versus type 2, was not well understood. Now, a new data study by Aetion is shedding some light on how often this severe complication effects each group. And the results for the type 1 community are more than just a little disheartening.

How Diabetes Leads to Amputation

There’s a reason foot amputations are one of the better-known diabetes complications. Every year in the US, about 73,000 lower extremity amputations (LEA) are performed on people with diabetes. 

Across the globe, it is estimated that a person loses a limb to diabetes every 30 seconds.

Why is Amputation is so Common

Amputations are often the result of two other, less severe diabetes complications.

It is the combination of neuropathy and PAD that sets the stage for amputation by reducing a person’s ability to feel an injury to the foot while also increasing the likelihood of severe infection. If left untreated, an infected injury or abscess can quickly turn gangrenous.

In cases of severe infection or gangrene, amputation is often the only way to assure the infection does not spread up the leg or to the rest of the body.

New Study Finds T1Ds at Higher Amputation Risk than T2Ds

While the rates of amputation among all people with diabetes have been well documented, how these rates differ between type 1 and type 2 diabetics has not been as clear.

But now, thanks to a new study published in Diabetes, Obesity, and Metabolism, we have a much better idea of how often this complication affects each group specifically.

The study, which used the Aetion Evidence Platform, a scientifically validated software capable of performing rapid analyses to generate real-world evidence at scale, analyzed the data of approximately 112.5 million unique insured beneficiaries to determine the rates of LEA among people with diabetes.

Type 1 people are about 3.5 times more likely to suffer amputation than their type 2 counterparts.

Of LEA cases identified in type 1 patients, only 30% were considered “major” amputations consisting of the entire foot or larger portions of the leg. The vast majority of amputations affected only the toes or smaller regions of the foot.

Overall, the study found that type 2 patients are about 20 times more likely than people without diabetes to suffer LEA, while type 1 patients are about 72 times more likely to suffer this complication.

Steps You Can Take to Lower Your Amputation Risk

As disheartening as the rates of LEA are for people with type 1 diabetes, it is important to keep in mind that there are no guarantees you will develop this complication. This is especially true if you take certain measures to keep yourself healthy and keep your diabetes in check.

Here are some simple steps you can take to reduce your amputation risk: