Plasma glucose levels and diabetes are independent predictors for mortality in patients with COVID-19

Author:

Long Hui,Li Jiachen,Li Rui,Zhang Haiyang,Ge Honghan,Zeng Hui,Chen Xi,Lu QingbinORCID,Jiang Wanli,Zeng Haolong,Che Tianle,Ye Xiaolei,Fang LiqunORCID,Qin Ying,Wang Qiang,Wu Qingming,Li Hao,Liu WeiORCID

Abstract

Abstract This study is performed to figure out how the presence of diabetes affects the infection, progression and prognosis of 2019 novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19), and the effective therapy that can treat the diabetes-complicated patients with COVID-19. A multicentre study was performed in four hospitals. COVID-19 patients with diabetes mellitus (DM) or hyperglycaemia were compared with those without these conditions and matched by propensity score matching for their clinical progress and outcome. Totally, 2444 confirmed COVID-19 patients were recruited, from whom 336 had DM. Compared to 1344 non-DM patients with age and sex matched, DM-COVID-19 patients had significantly higher rates of intensive care unit entrance (12.43% vs. 6.58%, P = 0.014), kidney failure (9.20% vs. 4.05%, P = 0.027) and mortality (25.00% vs. 18.15%, P < 0.001). Age and sex-stratified comparison revealed increased susceptibility to COVID-19 only from females with DM. For either non-DM or DM group, hyperglycaemia was associated with adverse outcomes, featured by higher rates of severe pneumonia and mortality, in comparison with non-hyperglycaemia. This was accompanied by significantly altered laboratory indicators including lymphocyte and neutrophil percentage, C-reactive protein and urea nitrogen level, all with correlation coefficients >0.35. Both diabetes and hyperglycaemia were independently associated with adverse prognosis of COVID-19, with hazard ratios of 10.41 and 3.58, respectively.

Funder

the China Mega-Project for Infectious Diseases grant

the Capital’s Funds for Health Improvement and Research

the Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Epidemiology

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