Asian Spine J.  2017 Jun;11(3):337-347. 10.4184/asj.2017.11.3.337.

The Clinical Correlations between Diabetes, Cigarette Smoking and Obesity on Intervertebral Degenerative Disc Disease of the Lumbar Spine

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA. ajakoi22@gmail.com
  • 2Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Drexel University, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
  • 3Department of Neurological Surgery, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA.

Abstract

STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective analysis of a nationwide private insurance database. Chi-square analysis and linear regression models were utilized for outcome measures. PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to investigate any relationship between lumbar degenerative disc disease, diabetes, obesity and smoking tobacco. OVERVIEW OF LITERATURE: Diabetes, obesity, and smoking tobacco are comorbid conditions known to individually have effect on degenerative disc disease. Most studies have only been on a small populous scale. No study has yet to investigate the combination of these conditions within a large patient cohort nor have they reviewed the combination of these conditions on degenerative disc disease.
METHODS
A retrospective analysis of insurance billing codes within the nationwide Humana insurance database was performed, using PearlDiver software (PearlDiver, Inc., Fort Wayne, IN, USA), to identify trends among patients diagnosed with lumbar disc degenerative disease with and without the associated comorbidities of obesity, diabetes, and/or smoking tobacco. Patients billed for a comorbidity diagnosis on the same patient record as the lumbar disc degenerative disease diagnosis were compared over time to patients billed for lumbar disc degenerative disease without a comorbidity. There were no sources of funding for this manuscript and no conflicts of interest.
RESULTS
The total number and prevalence of patients (per 10,000) within the database diagnosed with lumbar disc degenerative disease increased by 241.4% and 130.3%, respectively. The subsets of patients within this population who were concurrently diagnosed with either obesity, diabetes, tobacco use, or a combination thereof, was significantly higher than patients diagnosed with lumbar disc degenerative disease alone (p <0.05 for all). The number of patients diagnosed with lumbar disc degenerative disease and smoking rose significantly more than patients diagnosed with lumbar disc degenerative disease and either diabetes or obesity (p <0.05). The number of patients diagnosed with lumbar disc degenerative disease, smoking and obesity rose significantly more than the number of patients diagnosed with lumbar disc degenerative disease and any other comorbidity alone or combination of comorbidities (p <0.05).
CONCLUSIONS
Diabetes, obesity and cigarette smoking each are significantly associated with an increased diagnosis of lumbar degenerative disc disease. The combination of smoking and obesity had a synergistic effect on increased rates of lumbar degenerative disc disease. Patient education and preventative care is a vital goal in prevention of degenerative disc disease within the general population.

Keyword

Degenerative disc disease; Lumbar spine; Tobacco use; Obesity; Diabetes mellitus

MeSH Terms

Cohort Studies
Comorbidity
Diabetes Mellitus
Diagnosis
Financial Management
Humans
Insurance
Linear Models
Obesity*
Outcome Assessment (Health Care)
Patient Education as Topic
Prevalence
Retrospective Studies
Smoke
Smoking*
Spine*
Tobacco
Tobacco Products*
Tobacco Use
Smoke
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