key: cord-0783445-ptnx5ifg authors: Fox, Tamaryn; Ruddiman, Kathleen; Lo, Kevin Bryan; Peterson, Eric; DeJoy, Robert; Salacup, Grace; Pelayo, Jerald; Bhargav, Ruchika; Gul, Fahad; Albano, Jeri; Azmaiparashvili, Zurab; Anastasopoulou, Catherine; Patarroyo-Aponte, Gabriel title: The relationship between diabetes and clinical outcomes in COVID-19: a single-center retrospective analysis date: 2020-08-17 journal: Acta Diabetol DOI: 10.1007/s00592-020-01592-8 sha: 6a85bd7ad05950a16df3962cc265d3dd082b8f0c doc_id: 783445 cord_uid: ptnx5ifg AIMS: Coronavirus disease 19 (COVID-19) has become a pandemic. Diabetic patients tend to have poorer outcomes and more severe disease (Kumar et al. in Diabetes Metab Syndr 14(4):535–545, 2020. 10.1016/j.dsx.2020.04.044). However, the vast majority of studies are representative of Asian and Caucasian population and fewer represent an African-American population. METHODS: In this single-center, retrospective observational study, we included all adult patients (> 18 years old) admitted to Einstein Medical Center, Philadelphia, with a diagnosis of COVID-19. Patients were classified according to having a known diagnosis of diabetes mellitus. Demographic and clinical data, comorbidities, outcomes and laboratory findings were obtained. RESULTS: Our sample included a total of 355 patients. 70% were African-American, and 47% had diabetes. Patients with diabetes had higher peak inflammatory markers like CRP 184 (111–258) versus 142 (65–229) p = 0.012 and peak LDH 560 (384–758) versus 499 (324–655) p = 0.017. The need for RRT/HD was significantly higher in patients with diabetes (21% vs 11% p = 0.013) as well as the need for vasopressors (28% vs 18% p = 0.023). Only age was found to be an independent predictor of mortality. We found no significant differences in inpatient mortality p = 0.856, need for RRT/HD p = 0.429, need for intubation p = 1.000 and need for vasopressors p = 0.471 in African-Americans with diabetes when compared to non-African-Americans. CONCLUSIONS: Our study demonstrates that patients with COVID-19 and diabetes tend to have more severe disease and poorer clinical outcomes. African-American patients with diabetes did not differ in outcomes or disease severity when compared to non-African-American patients. A cluster of pneumonia cases of unclear etiology originating in Wuhan city, Hubei Province, China, in late December 2019 now known as Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID- 19) has become a pandemic [2] . It has affected over 1.9 million people in the USA alone [3] and 7.2 million people worldwide [4] . Reviewing literature on the effect of having diabetes in the context of other respiratory viral syndromes such as Middle Eastern Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) and Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) shows that patients with diabetes have been shown to have higher mortality Managed by Massimo Porta. rates [5, 6] . This demonstrates the importance of reviewing the impact of diabetes in context of COVID-19. COVID-19 outcomes tend to be poorer in patients with advanced age and multiple comorbidities [7, 8] Diabetes mellitus in general is widely known to cause significant morbidity and mortality as well as healthcare expenditure [9] . A meta-analysis including 33 studies inclusive of 16,000 patients investigated the relationship between COVID-19 and diabetes. It found that those with diabetes had higher risk of severe disease as well as higher rates of mortality [1] . Important to note that in this meta-analysis, the majority of patients were Asian or Caucasian, 30 of the 33 studies were from China, one in France and two in the USA. Thus, it becomes imperative amidst the current COVID-19 pandemic to investigate the interplay between diabetes and COVID-19 to potentially elucidate treatment strategies and further research opportunities in this specific population. In our study, we were able to highlight a high-risk, predominantly African-American population with multiple comorbidities. This gave us the unique opportunity to see if demographic data, comorbidities and other characteristics including disease severity and outcomes differed in those hospitalized with COVID-19 with and without a diagnosis of diabetes mellitus. This study was a single-center retrospective analysis of all patients 18 years of age or older who were admitted to Einstein Medical Center, Philadelphia, from March 1 to April 24, 2020, with a confirmed diagnosis of COVID-19 via reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction assays (RT-PCR) performed on nasopharyngeal swab specimens. Laboratory values were collected including D-dimer (by Stago Compact Max), ferritin (by Architect I2000 SR Immunoassay), CRP (by Architect C8000 Clinical Chemistry), procalcitonin (by Architect I2000 SR Immunoassay), LDH (by Architect C8000 Clinical Chemistry) and hemoglobin A1c (by Architect C8000 Clinical Chemistry). Patients were classified according to having a known diagnosis of diabetes mellitus. We included patients with pharmacologic treatment of diabetes before admission consisting of a broad range of oral hypoglycemic agents, injectable agents and insulin. Pharmacological treatment of diabetes during hospitalization consisted mainly of insulin, while oral hypoglycemic agents were suspended. Demographic and clinical data, comorbidities, outcomes and laboratory findings were obtained. This study was approved by the Institutional Review Board. Demographic variables were presented using descriptive statistics and frequencies. Categorical variables were analyzed with chi-square testing. Demographic and clinical variables were tabulated. Independent t-test was used for continuous variables. For skewed variables, Mann-Whitney U test was used to compare differences. Outcomes such as inpatient death, need for renal replacement therapy or hemodialysis (RRT/HD) and need for vasopressors or intubation were considered. Multivariate logistic regression was used to evaluate the factors associated with mortality among patients with diabetes and COVID-19. 95% confidence intervals were used and are presented when appropriate. All analyses were performed using IBM's SPSS Statistics for Windows, Version 23.0. A total of 389 patients were evaluated in our hospital and tested positive via RT-PCR for COVID-19. Nine patients were excluded who were still admitted at the time of analysis. Twenty-five patients were excluded due to incomplete clinical outcome data, leaving a final sample of 355 patients (see Fig. 1 ). In the final sample of 355 patients, the mean age (± SD) was 66.21 ± 14.21, 49% were female and 70% were African-American. Chronic medical conditions of these patients included hypertension (77%), diabetes mellitus (47%), COPD (13%) and asthma (8%). The number of in hospital deaths was 80 (23%). The mean HbA1c among patients with diabetes was 7.84 ± 2.33. Traditional cardiovascular risk factors such as hypertension (91% vs 64% p < 0.0001) and chronic kidney disease (25% vs 12% p = 0.002) were higher in patients with diabetes compared to those without. Body mass index (BMI) was also significantly higher in patients with diabetes (31.1 ± 8.5 vs 28.5 ± 9.4 p = 0.009) compared to those without. Cardiovascular disease such as heart failure (24% vs 11% p = 0.001) and coronary artery disease (27% vs 17% p = 0.028) were more frequently present in patients with diabetes. During the hospital course, patients with diabetes had a significantly higher peak CRP 184 (111-258) versus 142 (65-229) p = 0.012 and peak LDH 560 (384-758) versus 499 (324-655) p = 0.017. Meanwhile, other inflammatory markers such as ferritin and procalcitonin showed trends toward significance (see Table 1 ). There were significantly more patients with diabetes who were given steroids (35% vs 24% p = 0.026), and steroid use itself was associated with significantly higher inpatient death (47% vs 17% p < 0.0001) compared to those who were not given steroids. There was also a significantly higher rate of the need for RRT/HD (21% vs 11% p = 0.013) and the need for vasopressors (28% vs 18% p = 0.023) among patients with diabetes compared to those without. There were higher rates of inpatient mortality among patients with diabetes, but this only showed a trend toward significance (27% vs 19% p = 0.053). After multivariate logistic regression adjusting for various demographic and comorbidity variables, only age was an independent predictor of inpatient death among patients with diabetes OR 1.039 95% CI (1.003 to 1.077) p = 0.035 (Table 2) . A subgroup analysis looking at patients 60 years of age or older showed significantly higher risk of death (27% vs 12% p = 0.001). Another subgroup analysis looking at African-American patients with diabetes shows no significant differences in terms of outcomes on inpatient mortality p = 0.856, need for RRT/HD p = 0.429, need for intubation p = 1.000 and need for vasopressors p = 0.471, compared to non-African-Americans. On univariate analysis, patients with diabetes had significantly more composite outcome of inpatient death, need for RRT/HD, vasopressors and intubation compared to those without diabetes (44% vs 33% p = 0.037). However, on multivariate regression (see Table 3 ), after adjusting for the various demographic and clinical variables, it was no longer statistically significant OR 1.4 95% CI (0.847 to 2.315) p = 0.189. Looking at the prior research on the effect of type 2 diabetes on outcomes in other viral syndromes such as Middle Eastern Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) and Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), those with diabetes were shown to have higher mortality [5, 6] . On review of the current literature of the association between diabetes and COVID-19 outcomes, it has been shown that those with diabetes had significantly higher mortality as well as evidence of multi-organ injury when compared to those without diabetes. This was demonstrated by a large retrospective study done in China. The same study also demonstrated that those with well-controlled blood glucose tended to have lower mortality as well [10] . This highlights the importance of our study further characterizing the effect of diabetes on outcomes in our patient population to thus ascertain further areas of research such as association between degree of control of diabetes and subsequent outcomes. Patients with diabetes have high rates of other metabolic risk factors including hypertension, higher BMI, higher frequency of chronic kidney disease (CKD), coronary artery disease (CAD) and heart failure, which are expected. They also tend to have higher inflammatory markers compared to those without diabetes. Obesity and related diseases such as hypertension, dyslipidemias and metabolic syndrome have been shown to have elevated inflammatory biomarkers such as interleukin-6 (IL-6) and C-reactive protein (CRP). This correlation has been linked to the development of cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes [11] . There is a lot of literature that has shown the chronic inflammatory state in patients with diabetes [12] . This link becomes increasingly important as in COVID-19, increased levels of certain inflammatory biomarkers have been linked to disease severity [7, 13, 14] . Pro-inflammatory cytokines and increased production of glycosylation end products can all be induced by hyperglycemia and insulin-resistant states. Patients with diabetes have a higher propensity of developing infections, and this chronic inflammatory process may be the underlying mechanism [15, 16] . The patients with diabetes had higher rates of need for RRT/HD as well as the need for vasopressors. There was also a trend to higher mortality. It is likely that patients with diabetes get more severe disease as evident by the above. This effect did not vary in terms of ethnicity or race, perhaps because we also had a lot of other minorities including Hispanics, Asians, etc., who are also at high risk. In fact, Caucasians were the minority in our study [17] . However, on multivariate regression and thus adjustment for clinical variables and demographics, these findings of in patient death, need for RRT/HD, vasopressor and intubation were no longer statistically significant. We suspect this is due to the interplay of other comorbidities, dilution by age as well as the relatively small sample size. Patients who had diabetes also got more steroids which were most likely a form of selection bias where sicker people tend to get more aggressive treatment. However, this has some treatment implications such as hyperglycemia and poorer glucose control. Although temporal associations cannot truly be established in a retrospective study design, hyperglycemia itself has also been associated with poor hospital outcomes in previous studies [18, 19] . In addition, it is important to note that hyperglycemia can occur without a previous diagnosis of diabetes. The attachment of the coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) to the angiotensin converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) receptors that are present in the islet [20] . Ultimately hyperglycemia, regardless of previous diabetes diagnosis, has been shown to cause more severe disease and worse outcomes [19] . This can present as a huge challenge in the efforts to achieve optimal glucose control in patients with concomitant severe COVID-19 and diabetes plus steroid use. Interestingly, after taking into account all factors including comorbidities and demographics, among diabetic patients with COVID-19, ultimately only age was shown to be an independent predictor of mortality after multivariate regression, but not any of the cardiovascular factors. This study was limited by the nature of its retrospective single-center design. Medications that may influence outcomes such as those used for diabetes treatment were not taken into account. Since our institution caters to an underserved population, compliance to standard medical therapy and appropriate follow-up may be an issue and was not addressed in this study. Many of our patients did not have a documented A1c, and thus, there was an inability to do analyses by A1c and thus comparisons based on diabetic control. In addition, we did not have the detailed amount of steroid doses given to our patients which might have affected the degree of diabetes control. This does, however, highlight the necessity for further study comparing outcomes in COVID-19 based on control of diabetes. A majority of our study population were at high risk including predominantly African-Americans with multiple comorbidities, but also other minority ethnic groups like Hispanic and Asian patients. Our study gives us a glimpse into the outcomes of these high-risk population groups. Our study demonstrates that patients with COVID-19 and diabetes mellitus tend to have more severe disease and poorer clinical outcomes. Only age was found to be an independent predictor of mortality. We also found that African-American patients with diabetes did not have significant difference in outcomes and disease severity when compared to non-African-American patients. Ethics Approval This study was reviewed and approved by the institutional review board of our institution. Albert Einstein Health Network (AEHN) Institutional Review Board. 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Conflict of interest None of the authors have any conflicts of interest to disclose.