Diabetes and risk of hospitalisation due to infection in northeastern Thailand: Retrospective cohort study using population‐based healthcare service data

Author:

Peerawaranun Pimnara1ORCID,Pan‐ngum Wirichada12ORCID,Hantrakun Viriya1ORCID,Wild Sarah H.3ORCID,Dunachie Susanna145ORCID,Chamnan Parinya67ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Mahidol‐Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Unit, Faculty of Tropical Medicine Mahidol University Bangkok Thailand

2. Department of Tropical Hygiene, Faculty of Tropical Medicine Mahidol University Bangkok Thailand

3. Usher Institute, University of Edinburgh Edinburgh UK

4. Oxford NIHR Biomedical Research Centre Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust Oxford UK

5. NDM Centre for Global Health Research, Nuffield Department of Clinical Medicine University of Oxford Oxford UK

6. Cardiometabolic Research Group, Department of Social Medicine Sunprasitthiprasong Regional Hospital Ubonratchathani Thailand

7. College of Medicine and Public Health Ubonratchathani University Ubonratchathani Thailand

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundPopulation‐based studies describing the association between diabetes and increased risk of infection have largely been based in high‐income countries. There is limited information describing the burden of infectious disease attributable to diabetes in low and middle‐income countries. This study aimed to describe the burden and risk of infectious disease hospitalisation in people with diabetes compared to those without diabetes in northeastern Thailand.MethodsIn a retrospective cohort study using electronic health record data for 2012–2018 for 3.8 million people aged ≥20 years in northeastern Thailand, hospitalisation rates for any infectious diseases (ICD‐10 codes A00‐B99) were estimated and negative binomial regression used to estimate rate ratios (RR) for the association between diabetes and infectious disease hospitalisation adjusted for age, sex and area of residence.ResultsIn this study, 164,177 people had a diagnosis of diabetes mellitus at any point over the study period. Infectious disease hospitalisation rates per 1000 person‐years (95%CI) were 71.8 (70.9, 72.8), 27.7 (27.1, 28.3) and 7.5 (7.5, 7.5) for people with prevalent diabetes, incident diabetes and those without diabetes respectively. Diabetes was associated with a 4.6‐fold higher risk of infectious disease hospitalisation (RR (95% CI) 4.59 (4.52, 4.66)). RRs for infectious disease hospitalisation were 3.38 (3.29, 3.47) for people with diabetes managed by lifestyle alone and 5.29 (5.20, 5.39) for people receiving prescriptions for diabetes drugs.ConclusionsIn this Thai population, diabetes was associated with substantially increased risk of hospitalisation due to infectious diseases and people with diabetes who were on pharmacological treatment had a higher risk than those receiving lifestyle modification advice alone.

Publisher

Wiley

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